Word Meanings - POSTPONE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
1. To defer to a future or later time; to put off; also, to cause to be deferred or put off; to delay; to adjourn; as, to postpone the consideration of a bill to the following day, or indefinitely. His praise postponed, and never to be
Additional info about word: POSTPONE
1. To defer to a future or later time; to put off; also, to cause to be deferred or put off; to delay; to adjourn; as, to postpone the consideration of a bill to the following day, or indefinitely. His praise postponed, and never to be paid. Cowper. 2. To place after, behind, or below something, in respect to precedence, preference, value, or importance. All other considerations should give way and be postponed to this. Locke. Syn. -- To adjourn; defer; delay; procrastinate.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of POSTPONE)
- Defer
- Delay
- postpone
- waive
- adjourn
- prorogue
- put off
- retard
- procrastinate
- protract
- hinder
- prolong
- Prorogue
- Adjourn
- defer
Related words: (words related to POSTPONE)
- PROTRACTIVE
Drawing out or lengthening in time; prolonging; continuing; delaying. He suffered their protractive arts. Dryden. - DEFERENTIALLY
With deference. - HINDEREST
Hindermost; -- superl. of Hind, a. Chaucer. - WAIVE
A woman put out of the protection of the law. See Waive, v. t., 3 , and the Note. (more info) 1. A waif; a castaway. Donne. - PROLONGE
A rope with a hook and a toggle, sometimes used to drag a gun carriage or to lash it to the limber, and for various other purposes. - POSTPONE
1. To defer to a future or later time; to put off; also, to cause to be deferred or put off; to delay; to adjourn; as, to postpone the consideration of a bill to the following day, or indefinitely. His praise postponed, and never to be - HINDERMOST; HINDMOST
Furthest in or toward the rear; last. "Rachel and Joseph hindermost." Gen. xxxiii. 2. (more info) superlative from the same source as the comparative hinder. See - PROCRASTINATE
To put off till to-morrow, or from day to day; to defer; to postpone; to delay; as, to procrastinate repentance. Dr. H. More. Hopeless and helpless Ægeon wend, But to procrastinate his lifeless end. Shak. Syn. -- To postpone; adjourn; defer; delay; - POSTPONER
One who postpones. - DEFERENTIAL
Expressing deference; accustomed to defer. - RETARDATION
The keeping back of an approaching consonant chord by prolonging one or more tones of a previous chord into the intermediate chord which follows; -- differing from suspension by resolving upwards instead of downwards. 4. The extent to which anything - DEFER
To put off; to postpone to a future time; to delay the execution of; to delay; to withhold. Defer the spoil of the city until night. Shak. God . . . will not long defer To vindicate the glory of his name. Milton. (more info) different ways; dis- - PROTRACTILE
Capable of being protracted, or protruded; protrusile. - DEFERMENT
The act of delaying; postponement. My grief, joined with the instant business, Begs a deferment. Suckling. - PROLONGATE
To prolong; to extend in space or in time. - PROTRACT
To draw to a scale; to lay down the lines and angles of, with scale and protractor; to plot. (more info) 1. To draw out or lengthen in time or in space; to continue; to prolong; as, to protract an argument; to protract a war. 2. To put off to - PROLONGATION
1. The act of lengthening in space or in time; extension; protraction. Bacon. 2. That which forms an additional length. - DEFERVESCENCE; DEFERVESCENCY
The subsidence of a febrile process; as, the stage of defervescence in pneumonia. (more info) 1. A subsiding from a state of ebullition; loss of heat; lukewarmness. A defervescency in holy actions. Jer. Taylor. - ADJOURNAL
Adjournment; postponement. "An adjournal of the Diet." Sir W. Scott. - PROLONGABLE
Capable of being prolonged; as, life is prolongable by care. Each syllable being a prolongable quantity. Rush. - READJOURN
To adjourn a second time; to adjourn again.