Postponement in a sentence as a noun

Whenever I cannot wrap my head around a CS concept, I blame my postponement of my degree.

Unless you're planning on keeping them there forever, that's not a solution, just a postponement.

That seems accurate to me. There is also another class of postponement you can apply for if you don't get a deferment, which is called a forbearance.

For a distro that moves as quickly as Ubuntu does, a two-year delay is about as good as indefinite postponement.

Small submarines mean: coastal defense – that is, self-defense and postponement of world revolution.

A day postponement will give the applicant in east coast a breather but don't know how much of help it will be with all the power outage and other hassle with a day.

There was some scrutiny of their business model around their recent IPO postponement & acquisition rumors.

"I am very sceptical of the euphemistic suggestion that the primary purpose of these sites is to enable postponement of reading.

"The new introspectiveness announced the demise of an established set of traditional faiths centred on work and the postponement of gratification, and the emergence of a consumption-oriented lifestyle ethic centred on lived experience and the immediacy of daily lifestyle choices.

Postponement definitions

noun

time during which some action is awaited; "instant replay caused too long a delay"; "he ordered a hold in the action"

See also: delay hold wait

noun

act of putting off to a future time

See also: deferment deferral