Deferment in a sentence as a noun

I know a lot of MIT programs let you take a 1 year deferment.

You're right that during the deferment there isn't much effect.

And in some cases where the fix is tricky, there should be an occasional, mutually-agreed short deferment.

" This line of thinking and deferment of responsibility is what leads to financial crises.

I have $30,000-ish in student loans for my MIS, and I keep my loans in deferment status by staying enrolled as a half-time student at the local community college.

The deferment programs are only available on one's principal residence.

Request a deferment or forebearance on any loans with an interest rate of 4%, and pay all that extra on your loans at 18%.- Umm... there's no easy way out to give up work and create a company.

When you say risk deferment, which type of risk are you discussing specifically?I see cryptocurrency use as being largely automated and transparent to the consumer in future.

This option is attractive for clients who have yet to raise money.- However, deferment comes at a cost: we've seen big firm legal bills for incorporation and basic documents that range in the 10 to 20k dollar range.

You can probably get a fresh start on everything else that way, put your student loans on deferment for a long time, and get a job -- practically any job -- and start paying the student loans off and getting a life.

The US has had a system to allow the children of the rich to avoid the military during wars since World War II - the student 2-S draft deferment to the end of conscription altogether in the early 1970s.

This may include working in a hospital or other non-military role, but usually they request and get a farm deferment, to work on Amish or Mennonites farms, producing food as their "war effort.

Although these schools do say that they don't want money to be an issue, it truly is unfair for anyone to ask them for a free education, though deferment is perfectly valid if they deliver their promise of making you good.

"If the effectiveness of a justice system is seen in terms of rate of incarceration, then the society that takes that view does not sound particularly as though it believes in freedom as a fundamental value, but rather prefers values like retribution and security through deferment to authority.

"could be that the US justice system is that much more effective"If the effectiveness of a justice system is seen in terms of rate of incarceration, then the society that takes that view does not sound particularly as though it believes in freedom as a fundamental value, but rather prefers values like retribution and security through deferment to authority.

I still have issue with the fact that:* there's not a means test* the interest charged doesn't match market interest, so when you finally die and your estate settles up with the government, you've paid less tax than the fellow down the road due to interest rate arbitrageI can't find usage stats on BC's tax deferment program, which is a shame as theirs seems the most open to abuse.

Deferment definitions

noun

act of putting off to a future time

See also: postponement deferral