carry-over

carry-over
index balance (amount in excess), remainder (remaining part)

Burton's Legal Thesaurus. . 2006


carry-over
The designation of the process by which net operating loss for one year may be applied, as provided by federal tax law, to each of several taxable years following the taxable year of such loss.

Dictionary from West's Encyclopedia of American Law. 2005.


carry-over
The designation of the process by which net operating loss for one year may be applied, as provided by federal tax law, to each of several taxable years following the taxable year of such loss.

Short Dictionary of (mostly American) Legal Terms and Abbreviations.

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  • carry-over — carry .over n [singular] 1.) something you do, or something that happens now, that is the result of a situation that existed in the past carry over from ▪ Some of the problems schools are facing are a carry over from the previous government s… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • carry over — {v.} 1. To save for another time. * /The store had some bathing suits it had carried over from last year./ * /What you learn in school should carry over into adult life./ 2. To transfer (as a figure) from one column, page, or book to another. *… …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • carry over — {v.} 1. To save for another time. * /The store had some bathing suits it had carried over from last year./ * /What you learn in school should carry over into adult life./ 2. To transfer (as a figure) from one column, page, or book to another. *… …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • carry-over — ˈcarry ˌover noun [singular] 1. ACCOUNTING an amount of money earned in a particular year that is still available to be spent the following year: carry over from/​to • The £20 million included a £7 million carry over from last year s budget. 2.… …   Financial and business terms

  • carry over — (something) to allow something you deal with to continue existing. I try not to let my problems at work carry over into my private life. She couldn t pay the full amount she owed, so she carried over part of it to the next month …   New idioms dictionary

  • carry over — index continue (resume), holdover Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 carry over …   Law dictionary

  • carry-over — [kar′ē ō΄vər] n. 1. the act of carrying over 2. something carried or left over …   English World dictionary

  • carry over — ► carry over 1) keep to use or deal with in a new context. 2) postpone. Main Entry: ↑carry …   English terms dictionary

  • carry over — verb 1. transfer or persist from one stage or sphere of activity to another (Freq. 4) • Derivationally related forms: ↑carry over • Hypernyms: ↑prevail, ↑persist, ↑die hard, ↑run, ↑endure …   Useful english dictionary

  • carry over — v. (D; tr.) to carry over from; to (carry these figures over to the next page; to carry over a tradition from one generation to another) * * * [ kærɪ əʊvə] to (carry over these figures over to the next page; to carry over a tradition from one… …   Combinatory dictionary

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