to carry over

  • 1carry-over — carry .over n [singular] 1.) something you do, or something that happens now, that is the result of a situation that existed in the past carry over from ▪ Some of the problems schools are facing are a carry over from the previous government s… …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 2carry over — {v.} 1. To save for another time. * /The store had some bathing suits it had carried over from last year./ * /What you learn in school should carry over into adult life./ 2. To transfer (as a figure) from one column, page, or book to another. *… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 3carry over — {v.} 1. To save for another time. * /The store had some bathing suits it had carried over from last year./ * /What you learn in school should carry over into adult life./ 2. To transfer (as a figure) from one column, page, or book to another. *… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 4carry-over — ˈcarry ˌover noun [singular] 1. ACCOUNTING an amount of money earned in a particular year that is still available to be spent the following year: carry over from/​to • The £20 million included a £7 million carry over from last year s budget. 2.… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 5Carry over cooking — refers to the phenomenon that food retains heat and continues to cook after being removed from a source of heat. The larger and denser the object being heated, the greater the degree of carry over cooking. After being removed from the oven the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 6carry-over — index balance (amount in excess), remainder (remaining part) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 carry over …

    Law dictionary

  • 7carry over something — carry over (something) to allow something you deal with to continue existing. I try not to let my problems at work carry over into my private life. She couldn t pay the full amount she owed, so she carried over part of it to the next month …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 8carry over — (something) to allow something you deal with to continue existing. I try not to let my problems at work carry over into my private life. She couldn t pay the full amount she owed, so she carried over part of it to the next month …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 9carry over — index continue (resume), holdover Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 carry over …

    Law dictionary

  • 10carry-over — [kar′ē ō΄vər] n. 1. the act of carrying over 2. something carried or left over …

    English World dictionary