Sentence examples for postponement refers from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

Postponement refers to delaying certain processing or distribution activities until more precise information on demands is available, and is one of the supply chain management strategies often discussed in the literature.

Similar(59)

'The second demographic transition' refers to growing female employment, postponement of pregnancy and decreasing birth rates which have occurred in western countries.

Mr. Cohen noted in his statement that "the president fully supports this approach," referring to the postponement.

In your Aug. 22 editorial "Medicare's Claims," you refer to the postponement by Congress of a new competitive bidding system for durable medical equipment.

But the delay shouldn't raise questions, says Nimal Vallipuram, semiconductor analyst at Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein, since Micron's core business is semiconductors.* "I don't think that there is anything there," says Vallipuram, referring to the postponement.

I said, don't you think that we've had enough boobs in the White House?" Referring to her earlier postponement of this tour, because of back problems, she self-deprecated.

This process is generally referred to as the postponement of childbearing, which is the central focus of tempo studies in fertility research.

The causes for the postponement were: indication insufficiently discussed with the referring physician or in a multidisciplinary team (n = 2), missing relevant medical history (n = 2), absence of specific tools or material (n = 4), failure to stop anticoagulation medication (n = 2), fasting order not given (n = 3) or not correctly executed (n = 3), unknown coagulation profile (n = 1).

THE ARTS A report in the "Arts, Briefly" column on Feb. 11 about the postponement of the Broadway revival of "Pump Boys and Dinettes" referred incorrectly to another Broadway musical, "Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella".

We refer to the capability whereby firms delay price decision and make sales in response to actual market condition as postponement.

In consequence, an increase in the usage of ART in response to a price reduction due to a larger availability of insurance may be referred to ex-post moral hazard, while changes in behavior such as postponement of motherhood, which increases the likelihood of usage of ARTs in the future, may be referred to as ex-ante moral hazard.

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