Overage — may refer to: Cellphone overage charges Land sale overage This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the … Wikipedia
overage — over·age / ō və rij/ n: an amount exceeding a certain sum or quantity: as a: a percentage of the amount of sales grossed by a retail store that is paid under the terms of a lease in addition to a fixed rent b: an amount by which a payment or cost … Law dictionary
overage — (n.) a surplus amount, 1945, a banking term, coined from OVER (Cf. over) on model of SHORTAGE (Cf. shortage) … Etymology dictionary
overage — The dollar amount above the accountable amount shown on Form 1412 A at the conclusion of a retail vending credit examination … Glossary of postal terms
overage — overage1 [ō΄vərāj′] adj. 1. over the age fixed as a standard 2. so old as to be of no use overage2 [ō′vər ij] n. [ OVER + AGE] a surplus or excess, as of goods … English World dictionary
overage — Apples mainly to convertible securities. Difference between how much common stock one party must sell and the other wishes to buy for the same amount of convertible in a swap. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * overage o‧ver‧age [ˈəʊvərɪdʒ ǁ… … Financial and business terms
overage — overage1 /oh veuhr ayj /, adj. 1. beyond the acceptable or desired age: overage for the draft. 2. older than usual or expected for the activity, position, etc.: an overage baseball player who still outperforms many rookies. 3. too old to be… … Universalium
overage — 1. adjective /ˈəʊvərˈeɪdʒ/ a) Having an age that is greater than a stipulated minimum. b) Too old to be of use in a particular situation. 2. noun /ˈəʊvərˈeɪdʒ/ a) A surplus of … Wiktionary
overage charge — UK US noun [C, usually plural] ► COMMERCE an extra amount of money that you have to pay for using more of something than was expected or agreed: »With overage charges, she has had cell phone bills of $140 a month. »If energy costs increase,… … Financial and business terms
overage — I. adjective also overaged Etymology: 2over + age Date: 15th century 1. too old to be useful 2. older than is normal for one s position, function, or grade II. noun Etymology: 3over + age … New Collegiate Dictionary
overage — Synonyms and related words: balance, bonus, dividend, excess, extra, gratuity, lagniappe, leftover, margin, overmeasure, overplus, overrun, overset, overstock, oversupply, plus, pourboire, redundancy, remainder, something extra, spare,… … Moby Thesaurus