Deferral in a sentence as a noun

The deferral period in some other countries is less strict, down to a year in the EU.

Although maybe some employers just stick to matching the deferral?

Then you have 6 months to find a qualified high-tech job in the US. If you don't have an offer in that time you lose the visa and are put on deferral for 1 year.

But if you are a man who had oral sex with a man one time twenty years ago, that's a permanent "deferral.

" And that deferral -- plausible deniability -- is the first thing FB takes away.

Hi Jason - mundane accounting question: how do you account for revenue deferral?

You should negotiate at least $15k-$20k of deferral of fees if you are a startup, which means you won't cut them a check until/unless you get financed.

Sorry if the draft deferral comment was inappropriate.

You can put student loans on "hardship deferral" in the circumstance where you cannot pay them, but they do not go away and are not bankruptable.

At best, it allows us to distract ourselves with the potentially endless deferral of clicking from one link to another.

The "async" library has a neat trick to detect if the callback is called without deferring to the event loop, in which case it does the deferral itself.

Backbone with some simple RequestAnimationFrame deferral somewhat approaches that speed but in some cases Om still beats it by an order of magnitude.

They did a good thing that a lot of investors don't do: they gave you an actual rejection, rather than wasting your time with "we just need more information" and indefinite deferral.

He adds, “Highly compensated employees are subject to deferral limits that are based on non-highly compensated employee contribution rates.

The highest compensated employees, typically executive management, are subject to deferral limits that are based on the contribution rates of the regular employees.> Why is it important for companies to encourage their employees to save?

However, my specific point on bringing that up is that Scalia can't be counted on to hold to his own originalist views, so I emphasized his deferral to other branches of government instead as the sticking point, as well as his general dismissal of the right to privacy.

Deferral definitions

noun

a state of abeyance or suspended business

See also: recess

noun

act of putting off to a future time

See also: postponement deferment