0 a situation in which a prize has not been won in a competition and is added to the prize offered in the next competition:
a rollover week
1 an occasion when money is moved from one investment to another, often without the need to pay tax:
They saved about $18,000 in superannuation rollover funds.
2 an occasion when a debt or loan is moved from one company to another, or a debt or loan arrangement is allowed to continue for a longer period than previously agreed:
3 an image that changes on a computer screen when a cursor is moved over it:
an image rollover.
4 an occasion when a prize has not been won in a competition and is added to the prize offered in the next competition:
Net contribution flows consist of member contributions, rollovers, and insurance proceeds minus contribution tax, benefit payments, and insurance costs.
Moreover, using these constraints, the optimal trajectory of the vehicle for avoiding a slip or a rollover of the vehicle was generated.
Temporally jittered speech produces performance intensity, phonetically balanced rollover in young normal-hearing listeners.
It has been used to implement a car driving simulator used for the evaluation of a rollover avoidance controller.
Many studies have been conducted on rollover prevention of vehicle.
The simulation studies had also revealed what appears to be a correlation between the understeer curve and rollover propensity.
The government did not want to invest its own resources to reduce its domestic debt load, hoping instead to attract foreign capital to rollover and refinance its debt.
The increase is in respect of rollover of underspending against the 1994–95 external assistance vote.