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Showing results for deferral.
Definitions

deferral

[dih-fur-uhl] / dɪˈfɜr əl /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

At Vanguard, the average deferral rate, or percentage of income that participants chose to contribute to their retirement plan, rose to 7.7% in 2024, a record.

From The Wall Street Journal

Dorset Museum had hoped it could appeal to the Arts Council for a temporary export deferral to allow it more time to raise the money to keep it in the country and on public display.

From BBC

Realmuto said that, like Kuyateh, tens of thousands of immigrants have been granted withholding or deferral relief over the course of several decades.

From Los Angeles Times

But the magnitude was likely “a little more than expected,” with executive commentary suggesting that consumers are only undertaking smaller, maintenance-oriented projects and staying in a “deferral mindset” when it comes to bigger renovations.

From Barron's

Lenders reporting payments to credit-reporting bureaus typically mark deferred payments for consumers enrolled in hardship programs with a special code indicating “no information” or “deferral,” which does not hurt their credit.

From MarketWatch