释义 |
holdover
hold·o·ver H0238600 (hōld′ō′vər)n. One that is held over from an earlier time: a political adviser who was a holdover from the Reagan era; a family tradition that is a holdover from my grandparents' childhood.hold•o•ver (ˈhoʊldˌoʊ vər) n. a person or thing remaining from a former period. [1885–90, Amer.] ThesaurusNoun | 1. | holdover - an official who remains in office after his termhangoverfunctionary, official - a worker who holds or is invested with an office | | 2. | holdover - something that has survived from the past; "a holdover from the sixties"; "hangovers from the 19th century"hangoversurvival - something that survives | TranslationsIdiomsSeehold overHoldover
Holdover1. A check received too late in the day to be processed. Holdovers are local or in-state, but a hold is placed on them until the next business day. See also: Check hold.
2. See: Holdover tenant.holdover
Synonyms for holdovernoun an official who remains in office after his termSynonymsRelated Wordsnoun something that has survived from the pastSynonymsRelated Words |