postpone
/pəˈspəʊn/ (bre, ipa) · /pəʊˈspəʊn/ (ame, ipa) · /(ˌ)pōs(t)-ˈpōn/ (ame, mw)
postpone — 動詞
- postponepresent simple I / you / we / they
- postponeshe / she / it
- postponedpast simple
- postponing-ing form
1. to move an arranged activity, meeting, or trip to a future time instead of doing
延期;延後
把原定事情改晚辦
to move an arranged activity, meeting, or trip to a future time instead of doing it now
The school postponed sports day because the field was still flooded.
學校因為操場還淹著水,把運動會延期了。
postpone + event noun
After the doctor called, Mina postponed her trip until next month.
醫生打來後,Mina 把旅行延到下個月。
postpone + noun + until + time
We postponed buying a car until both of us had jobs.
我們把買車的事延後,等兩個人都有工作再說。
The wedding was postponed after the hotel kitchen caught fire.
那場婚禮在飯店廚房失火後延期了。
Because of the train strike, Emma postponed meeting her clients in Taipei.
因為火車罷工,Emma 把和台北客戶見面的事延後了。
- delay
is the broadest choice and can also describe something happening more slowly than expected
- defer
is more formal and is common for decisions, payments, or official actions
- put off
is more informal and is especially common in speech
- reschedule
usually suggests fixing a new time, not simply moving something later
- bring forward
means move an event to an earlier time and is especially common in British English
- move up
is a common everyday way to say something happens earlier
- advance
is a more formal verb for changing something to an earlier date or time
文法句型
postpone a meeting
postpone doing something
be postponed until Friday
用法筆記
Common with meetings, trips, weddings, and other planned events. Also takes an -ing form for activities, as in 'postpone buying a car' or 'postpone meeting a client'.