English
Etymology
From postpone + -ment.
Noun
postponement (countable and uncountable, plural postponements)
- A delay, as a formal delay in a proceeding.
The lawyer asked for a postponement in the trial so he could spend more time preparing before it began.
1976 February 7, Philip Gambone, “Coming Out: The Gay Identity Process”, in Gay Community News, volume 3, number 32, page 4:The postponement of homosexual behavior in men who know that they are homosexual can cause psychological anxiety and retard mature ego development.
Synonyms
Translations
the state of being adjourned
- Azerbaijani: təxir
- Bulgarian: отлагане (bg) n (otlagane)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 推遲 / 推迟 (zh) (tuīchí), 延緩 / 延缓 (zh) (yánhuǎn), 延期 (zh) (yánqī)
- French: ajournement (fr) m
- German: Aufschub (de) m, Verschiebung (de) f
- Greek:
- Ancient: ἀναβολή f (anabolḗ)
- Indonesian: penundaan (id)
- Japanese: 延期 (ja) (えんき, enki)
- Macedonian: одложу́вање n (odložúvanje)
- Maori: tinakutanga, pāuhunga
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: ajournement n, utsettelse m, utsetning m or f, utsetting m or f
- Romanian: amânare (ro) f
- Russian: отсро́чка (ru) f (otsróčka) (postponement), откла́дывание (ru) n (otkládyvanije) (act of postponing), заде́ржка (ru) f (zadéržka) (delay)
- Spanish: aplazamiento m
- Swahili: uahirishaji
- Ukrainian: відклада́ння n (vidkladánnja)
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