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
The first two segments were designed to provoke disagreement, whereas the third segment permitted an assessment of carryover effects of the prior conflict.
There may have been a negative carryover effect from the more difficult sets to the easier ones.
Residual activation in the ' 'no' ' units remains unchanged and so the carryover effect will remain unchanged too.
Thus, there was a significant positive carryover effect between the two contests.
Further, the significant coefficient of retired women suggests a carryover effect from past employment, which is statistically indiscernible for men.
The density of assessments naturally gives rise to a concern about carryover effects that could contaminate developmental trends.
Here they appreciated that comparison with phenol was not always appropriate, and that carryover of disinfectant into the detection tubes might be a problem.
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.