Well it could either be a metaphor or a literal statement. If you are to postpone a party, you are canceling it for that day and moving it to a different date.
To put off doing something until a later time.
To postpone
Due to muddy field conditions, the little league players will postpone their game until next week. We have to postpone the party because our entire family is sick with the flu. If you haven't finished your data summaries then we need to postpone our meeting. Because of recent budget cuts, we'll need to postpone the class trip.
It's an incorrect spelling for 'postpone'.
Postpone a marriage just means that it will take place at a time later than first scheduled
postpone what one should be doing, procarstinating
Postpone
The future tense of postpone is will postpone.
Let's postpone the presentation.
Due to the circumstances, we had to postpone the meeting until next week.
The abstract noun forms of the verb to postpone are postponement and the gerund, postponing.
No. that is the way it is spelled: postpone.
Its own territorial governor opposed statehood, because it the majority of people in it were not of his party.