Carryover vs Snooze - What's the difference?
carryover | snooze |
Something whose duration has been extended or that has been transferred to another time
An amount, especially a sum of money, transferred to a new column in a ledger, or applied to a later time
To sleep, especially briefly; to nap.
To pause; to postpone for a short while.
* 2003 , Ken Slovak, Absolute Beginner's Guide to Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 (page 110)
* 2007 , Sue Mosher, Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming (page 359)
* 2011 , Dan Gookin, Bill Loguidice, Motorola ATRIX For Dummies (page 40)
A period of sleep; a nap.
Something boring.
As nouns the difference between carryover and snooze
is that carryover is something whose duration has been extended or that has been transferred to another time while snooze is a period of sleep; a nap.As a verb snooze is
to sleep, especially briefly; to nap.carryover
English
Noun
(en noun)Quotations
* 1980 Daniel T. Morrow - The Economics of the International Stockholding of Wheat *: First, as a general rule, carryover stocks are, held in countries that have lower carrying costs, which are probably exporting countries because they enjoy lower prices. * 1992 Vic Campbell - Junction: Mild Adventure for the Armchair Ruralists *: The “Black Shoe” title is a carryover from the days of coal-burning ships . . .snooze
English
Verb
(intransitive)- The boss caught him snoozing at his desk.
- It enables you to dismiss the reminder, dismiss all reminders, open the highlighted item in the Reminder dialog, and snooze the reminder. Snoozing a reminder is similar to hitting the snooze button on an alarm clock
- Let's say you want to see all your reminders, but you don't want it to be too easy to snooze the ones for important items.
- To snooze the phone, press and release the power button.
Noun
(en noun)- The cat enjoys taking a snooze on a sunny windowsill.
- The whole movie was a snooze .
