a·bey·ance (-bns)n.1. The condition of being temporarily set aside; suspension: held the plan in abeyance.
2. Law A condition of undetermined ownership, as of an estate that has not yet been assigned.
I believe the word you are looking for is abeyance, and you have just misspelled it.
Our plans for today are in abeyance because of the poor weather
She petitioned the king to terminate the abeyance in her favor.
The student was held in abeyance after the punishment. It means a state of temporary suspension.
Abeyance is from the Old French "abeance", to expect. Originally a legal term meaning condition of a person in expectation or hope of receiving property. It later evolved in English law to mean the condition of property temporarily without an owner.
An abeyance is an act of expectancy or temporary suppression.
The raiding party is to be held in abeyance until the scouting party's signal.
Chairman asked whether this matter could be held in abeyance for the time being, Council agreed.
While the Olympics were on, in certain areas America set in abeyance the rules that prevented people from public protest.
Abeyance
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abeyance