timetable - meaning and definition. What is timetable
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What (who) is timetable - definition

TIME MANAGEMENT TOOL LISTING TIMES WHEN EVENTS ARE INTENDED TO TAKE PLACE
Scheduler; Timetables; Time-Table; Time-table; Arrival board; Scheduled; Shedule; Schedule (resource); Scheduling; Timetable; Schedule (construction); Employee scheduling; Schedules; Work schedule; Hours of operation; Transportation schedule
  • A train schedule informs travelers of the trains going to various locations, and indicates the times of departure.
  • Hours of operation posted at a FEMA office following a disaster inform the public of when FEMA employees will be available to assist them.
  • A weekly work schedule indicates which employees of a business are going to work at which times, to ensure the effective distribution of labor resources.
  • A volunteer adjusts the schedule board at Wikimania 2007. The board indicates the times and locations at which events will take place, thus assisting participants in deciding which events they can attend.

timetable         
(timetables, timetabling, timetabled)
1.
A timetable is a plan of the times when particular events are to take place.
Don't you realize we're working to a timetable. We have to have results...
The two countries are to try to agree a timetable for formal talks.
= schedule
N-COUNT
2.
In a school or college, a timetable is a list that shows the times in the week at which particular subjects are taught. You can also refer to the range of subjects that a student learns or the classes that a teacher teaches as their timetable. (BRIT; in AM, usually use class schedule
)
Options are offered subject to staff availability and the constraints of the timetable...
N-COUNT
3.
A timetable is a list of the times when trains, boats, buses, or aeroplanes are supposed to arrive at or leave from a particular place. (mainly BRIT; in AM, usually use schedule
)
For a local bus timetable, contact Dyfed County Council.
N-COUNT
4.
If something is timetabled, it is scheduled to happen or do something at a particular time. (mainly BRIT)
On both days, three very different trains will be timetabled...
Opie is timetabled to work a four-day week.
= schedule
VERB: usu passive, be V-ed, be V-ed to-inf
timetable         
¦ noun a list or plan of times at which events are scheduled to take place.
¦ verb schedule to take place at a particular time.
timetable         
n.
1) to make up a timetable
2) to issue a timetable
3) to follow a timetable
4) to upset a timetable (see schedule3)

Wikipedia

Schedule

A schedule or a timetable, as a basic time-management tool, consists of a list of times at which possible tasks, events, or actions are intended to take place, or of a sequence of events in the chronological order in which such things are intended to take place. The process of creating a schedule — deciding how to order these tasks and how to commit resources between the variety of possible tasks — is called scheduling, and a person responsible for making a particular schedule may be called a scheduler. Making and following schedules is an ancient human activity.

Some scenarios associate this kind of planning with learning life skills. Schedules are necessary, or at least useful, in situations where individuals need to know what time they must be at a specific location to receive a specific service, and where people need to accomplish a set of goals within a set time period.

Schedules can usefully span both short periods, such as a daily or weekly schedule, and long-term planning with respect to periods of several months or years. They are often made using a calendar, where the person making the schedule can note the dates and times at which various events are planned to occur. Schedules that do not set forth specific times for events to occur may instead list algorithmically an expected order in which events either can or must take place.

In some situations, schedules can be uncertain, such as where the conduct of daily life relies on environmental factors outside human control. People who are vacationing or otherwise seeking to reduce stress and achieve relaxation may intentionally avoid having a schedule for a certain period of time.

Examples of use of timetable
1. So, the timetable is not ours, the timetable is yours.
2. "I think that the timetable should be a global timetable.
3. Timetable ‘slipping‘ But, in a statement, officials admitted the original timetable was slipping.
4. Operation Cast Lead has a military timetable and a political timetable.
5. VP: Set timetable for pullout Al–Maliki‘s 24–point plan calls for a U.S. withdrawal but sets no timetable.