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to cancellation
noun
The act, process, or result of cancelling; as, the cancellation of certain words in a contract, or of the contract itself.
Exact(60)
And the application form stated, "All sessions subject to cancellation due to the N.H.L. lockout".
The volcano has already led to cancellation of some events because performers could not get there.
Asqa's freedom of information officer said the list was not limited to cancellation decisions.
Even at the best of times their concerts are prone to cancellation by officials for unclear reasons.
"Up All Night" slipped to 5.3 million viewers while "Free Agents" veered dangerously close to cancellation territory at 3.1 million.
But crowd-control issues and several fatalities led to cancellation of the events on Long Island after 1910.
All tours are subject to cancellation on short notice because of military testing, security concerns or the weather.
Last year problems in finding a leading act led to cancellation of the one-day event, the BBC reported.
The last major American marathon was also marked by tragedy: Hurricane Sandy led to cancellation of the race in New York.
When Mr. Michaels briefly left the show in the 1980s and the show teetered close to cancellation, Mr. Ebersol became its producer.
Sadly, turn-of-the-century fans had no such avenue, and a multitude of timeslot changes led to cancellation after one series.
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