deferment


Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
defer1 /dɪˈfəː/
verb (defers, deferring, deferred) put off to a later time; postpone.

Law (of a judge) postpone (a sentence) so that the circumstances or conduct of the defendant can be further assessed.

– derivatives
deferment noun,
deferrable adjective,
deferral noun.
– origin ME: from OFr. differer ‘defer or differ’, from L. differre, from dis- ‘apart’ + ferre ‘bring, carry’.



Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
defer2 /dɪˈfəː/
verb (defers, deferring, deferred) (defer to) submit to or acknowledge the merit of: he deferred to Tim's superior knowledge.
– derivatives
deferrer noun.
– origin ME: from OFr. deferer, from L. deferre ‘carry away, refer’, from de- ‘away from’ + ferre ‘bring, carry’.
'deferment' also found in these Oxford entries:

Forum discussions with the word(s) "deferment" in the title:


Look up "deferment" at Merriam-Webster
Look up "deferment" at dictionary.com

In other languages: Spanish | French | Italian | Portuguese | German | Russian | Polish | Romanian | Czech | Greek | Turkish | Chinese | Japanese | Korean | Arabic

Download free Android and iPhone apps

Android AppiPhone App
Report an inappropriate ad.