Interim in a sentence as a noun

If first outside funding is to be deferred, though, the perennial challenge becomes how to fund the interim process. 3.

It looks like it's profitable for BFM to claim or create lots of media clips so they get paid for these ads, in the interim period before the creator appeals. To fix it the incentives would have to change.

Such protections will continue to exist for offerings made by these small issuers who will get some interim relief from SOX requirements. One can argue that it is bad policy to afford such relief.

Scotland's Court of Session issued an interim interdict banning the links. Before Scotland’s highest court could rule on the legality of the links, the two publishers settled the case."

In the interim, it seems like the best way to capture value is to build companies to **** in talent acquisitions, while planning to leave to do it again as soon as you're vested. [1] Goldman Sachs 2011 net income was $162,913 per employee.

My guess is that there is some hiney covering going on with this explanation, and the interim CEO has little cause to care too much about responsibility, since he'll likely be out before year's end anyway. I really feel for the folks who work there.

Interim in a sentence as an adjective

'Target CEO Gregg Steinhafel described the search for an interim CIO as a “first step&=&.' Well actually the first step was scapegoating the CIO rather than those responsible for putting someone without an IT background in the position.

But they're so horribly inefficient that even if you replace that classic with a modern model that will fall apart the day after its warranty expires, you can save so much more money in the interim that you'll still be ahead after you replace it. Now, I'm not arguing that you should go out and buy the latest.

Google should be proposing a standard, open, byte-code compatible, Intermediate Language standard that can run Javascript and in the interim run on Javascript. That is something I could see Mozilla and Apple getting behind.

If you work for Google for 2 years and then separate from them, your 401k increased by $30k in the interim and you probably have six figures sitting in the bank account. If your startup is shot out from under you, you may end up counting the number of ramen boxes in the pantry while hoping that the startup can make good on its final payroll check.

True, Marx had spoken of the interim phase of the dictatorship of the proletariat as a necessity which in time would automatically become redundant. This 'intermediate phase' we know all too well, and we also know how it then developed, not ushering in a perfect world, but leaving behind a trail of appalling destruction.

The application is absolutely rock solid for me - most of the database crashes, and corruptions have stopped occurring for over a year - so in the interim, I have a product that works for me and will keep me satisfied for the next couple years. Meanwhile, Apple is going to put all their energy into a single photo system, instead of trying to do some schizophrenic split between iPhoto/Aperture - I expect to see a pretty excellent system out of it.

Interim definitions

noun

the time between one event, process, or period and another; "meanwhile the socialists are running the government"

See also: meantime meanwhile

adjective

serving during an intermediate interval of time; "an interim agreement"