hold over / ˈhoʊldˌoʊ vər /

搁置把握住保留把握住了

hold over 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a person or thing remaining from a former period.
  2. Printing. overset that can be kept for future use.

hold over 近义词

hold over

等同于 postpone

hold over

等同于 put off

hold over

等同于 remain

hold over

等同于 repeat

hold over

等同于 rescue

hold over

等同于 shelve

hold over

等同于 stay

hold over

等同于 restate

hold over

等同于 adjourn

hold over

等同于 delay

更多hold over例句

  1. Many of the holdovers from that team — attackman Matt Moore, midfielder Dox Aitken, defender Jared Conners and goalie Alex Rode among them — still play crucial roles.
  2. Unfazed by a hostile legislature, Bukele began “cleaning house” by firing holdovers from previous governments from his administration.
  3. The barriers are a holdover from a time when Internet access was a near-luxury—a consumer product rather than a utility.
  4. While holdovers have largely powered the Leafs’ strong season, they wouldn’t have a 7 percent chance of winning the franchise’s first Cup since 1967 without the contributions from their newcomers.
  5. That means that the larval phase isn’t a holdover from the deep past, but “a completely new evolutionary innovation,” he says.
  6. Mad Men, in other words, is a holdover of sorts: the last of the original Golden Age dramas.
  7. Unfortunately, there are only five of them, and one (Bjorn) is a holdover from the first game.
  8. I remember thinking that it looked like a holdover from the disco days.
  9. Perched atop a mountain of wavy, pulled-back hair is a mangled ball of manliness, a holdover from the days of the samurai.
  10. This holdover off Sloane Square must be doing something right.
  11. When our men enter military service, there is a strong holdover of their prodigal civilian habits.
  12. A liquid substance which when applied to a "holdover" revivifies it and enables its owner to sit up and notice the bar-tender.