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carry over

VERB
  1. transfer from one time period to the next
  2. transport from one place or state to another
    Adam would have been carried over into the life eternal
  3. hold over goods to be sold for the next season
  4. transfer or persist from one stage or sphere of activity to another

How To Use carry over In A Sentence

  • These ideas were largely a carry over from Edward Forbes in the late 1800's, who proposed the azoic hypothesis for the deep sea.
  • That appreciation and expression of the beautiful is something that the French explorers in that other world -- the valley reached of the pioneers of the seeing eyes and the understanding hearts -- have carried and will continue to carry over those same portages, to give that virile life of the west some of those higher satisfactions of which this daughter of the portage is the prophetess. The French in the Heart of America
  • They ruled workers can carry over untaken leave or claim compensation. The Sun
  • He added that there was a risk that loopholes allowing interference in the system could carry over into a new system. Times, Sunday Times
  • Carry over the assumptions of philosophical positivism and the basic notions of revelation will become nonsense.
  • They carry overstock and clearance, so the same brand might even be available…
  • I wonder if these two know how to calculate what deficits France shall have to overcarry over the years and also REPAY ITS HUGE DEBTS OF 1,3 TRILLIONS. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • The group agreed to carry over their discussion on the topic to the next meeting.
  • But, what about the other 40% of dirt sources, such as agglomerated paint particles, color carry over during the color change process and paint line cleaning?
  • These highly domesticated blossoms carry overtones of the convivial rituals of patrician social life.
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