0 something that comes from or continues from an earlier period: --
a carryover from sth Analysts say the day's strong selling was a carryover from Tuesday's 150-point drop in the industrial average.
1 an amount that is copied from an earlier accounting period to a later one --
As the report shows, the management can still be improved, above all in terms of cash management and carryover analysis.
We abolished the special rates, which were a carryover from the old board and lodging supplementary benefits scheme.
The delay in carrying out a number of activities calls into question the principle of budgetary annuality, which has caused the carryover of budgetary appropriations.
Second, raters were not permitted to rate adversity for the same subject across adjacent time spans, thereby preventing cognitive carryover resulting from recognition of unusual events recurring across time spans.
To reduce problems with carryover bias (common when raters compare one parent's behavior with the other's), each coder rated only one parent per family.
In the second half of the experiment, individuals reduced the interference effect but there was no change in the carryover effect.
Another example of successful and cost-effective programming was the amateur talent genre, which was a carryover from earlier radio programming.
Open: new composition at each stage; hatched: carryover from the previous stage; filled bars: cumulative costs of fallen flowers and seeds prior to each stage.