defer
verb /dɪˈfɜː(r)/
  /dɪˈfɜːr/
(formal)Verb Forms
 Phrasal Verbs| present simple I / you / we / they defer |    /dɪˈfɜː(r)/   /dɪˈfɜːr/  | 
| he / she / it defers |    /dɪˈfɜːz/   /dɪˈfɜːrz/  | 
| past simple deferred |    /dɪˈfɜːd/   /dɪˈfɜːrd/  | 
| past participle deferred |    /dɪˈfɜːd/   /dɪˈfɜːrd/  | 
| -ing form deferring |    /dɪˈfɜːrɪŋ/   /dɪˈfɜːrɪŋ/  | 
- defer (doing) something to delay something until a later time synonym put off
- The department deferred the decision for six months.
 - She had applied for deferred admission to college.
 
Extra Examples- Sentence was deferred for six months.
 - The decision has been deferred indefinitely.
 - We agreed to defer discussion of these issues until the next meeting.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- indefinitely
 - endlessly
 
- agree to
 - decide to
 
- for
 - pending
 - till
 - …
 
Word Originverb late Middle English (also in the sense ‘put on one side’): from Old French differer ‘defer or differ’, from Latin differre, from dis- ‘apart’ + ferre ‘bring, carry’. Compare with differ. defer to somebody/something. late Middle English: from Old French deferer, from Latin deferre ‘carry away, refer (a matter)’, from de- ‘away from’ + ferre ‘bring, carry’.