Residual in a sentence as a noun

Usually the car's residual is struck low enough to make this a good deal for the bank.

A quick search shows that residual values of S-Class's vary based on model and mileage per year, the numbers I'm seeing are in the 49% to 54% rate.

Now, if they offered to match the residual value percentage of a Toyota Corolla, ...

"[+] There exists a tax on automobiles which increases with age and which, fairly quickly, causes the tax to cost more than the residual value of the automobile.

A final low-speed mechanical switch disconnects the residual current.

The GPC ferrite core memories were examined for any possible residual data -- a process that at the time was expected to take several months.

It's probably best to think of them as an abstraction layer above the registrar level which handles any residual pain that might generate:* They will register all TLDs.

Residual in a sentence as an adjective

I would expect the "scrub" option to be for paranoid people worried about the FBI seizing your equipment and using electron microscopes to extract residual data.

"The real problem with consulting right now is that it's so freaking lucrative"I suggest for anyone doing consulting or building an app that they build into the price a monthly maintenance fee as a residual.

The same residual value percentage as the iconic Mercedes S Class, one of the finest premium sedans in the world They make this sound good, but it's not: fancier cars depreciate faster than regular cars.

We have virtually zero overhead and minimal residual or recurring income so we are not identical to valve, but their employee handbook could very easily be ourswe have a number of 'bad apples', but they generally find themselves ostracized very quickly.

The fascinating thing is that strong commercial/public cryptography has only really become a "thing" in the past couple of decades; it used to be nearly exclusively the domain of governments, which is why even today there are still residual export controls on strong cryptography.

What residual value would stick from such fleeing interactions with the rudiments of coding?It seems to me that, if one is to derive true value from learning to code, one needs to devote a significant level of dedicated hard work toward that effort and, if one fails to get beyond a minimal threshold, the only value gained is that of a very generalized form of knowledge that has little practical use in the real world.

Residual definitions

noun

something left after other parts have been taken away; "there was no remainder"; "he threw away the rest"; "he took what he wanted and I got the balance"

See also: remainder balance residue residuum rest

noun

(often plural) a payment that is made to a performer or writer or director of a television show or commercial that is paid for every repeat showing; "he could retire on his residuals"

adjective

relating to or indicating a remainder; "residual quantity"

See also: residuary