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To be announced
View on WikipediaTo be announced (TBA) is a placeholder term used very broadly in event planning to indicate that although something is scheduled or expected to happen, a particular aspect of it remains to be fixed or set. Other versions of the term include to be confirmed (TBC) and to be determined, discussed, defined, decided, declared, or done (TBD).
TBA versus TBC versus TBD
[edit]These phrases are similar, but may be used for different degrees of indeterminacy:
- To be announced (TBA) or to be declared (TBD) – details may have been determined, but are not yet ready to be announced.
- To be confirmed (TBC), to be resolved (TBR),[1] or to be provided (TBP)[2] – details may have been determined and possibly announced, but are still subject to change prior to being finalized.
- To be arranged, to be agreed (TBA), to be determined (TBD) or to be decided[3] – the appropriateness, feasibility, location, etc. of a given event has not been decided.
Other similar phrases sometimes used to convey the same meaning, and using the same abbreviations, include "to be ascertained", "to be arranged", "to be adjudicated", and "to be done".
Use of the abbreviation "TBA" is formally reported in a reference work at least as early as 1955,[4] and "TBD" is similarly reported as early as 1967.[5]
Examples
[edit]
These various placeholder terms are often used to indicate to the public that a vacant position in a lineup of speakers, musicians, or other performers remains to be filled. The terms also frequently indicate that a creative work, such as an album or film, is forthcoming but that the date of release is not yet known. If the forthcoming project is not yet named, these placeholders may be used to indicate that the name has not yet been selected, although the project may also be designated as "untitled" pending that determination.
The terms are also used in sports schedules, particularly where one team has locked in a position in a playoff schedule, but its opponent cannot yet be determined because several teams may qualify for the spot depending on their remaining wins or losses for the season, or because other teams have not yet competed in playoff games that will determine who will face the locked-in team.[a] In government and business, the terms may be used to indicate that a vacant organizational position is expected to be filled, or conversely that a particular individual will be employed in an as-yet-uncreated position.[citation needed]
In program guide listings, both paper and electronic, the term indicates that the program to be aired by a television station or channel will be announced in the near future, a last-second decision to remove a program or film where the content to be aired in its place cannot be updated on short notice by the listings provider, or that a program's airing (or delay to another time) depends on the continuation of a sports playoff series, which usually applies between the fifth and seventh matches or games of a best-of-seven series.[citation needed]
The age rating system of the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) requires the use of "tbc" (meaning "to be classified") for products that have been submitted to the BBFC and are awaiting final rating.[6][7]
Investment type
[edit]"TBA" (meaning "to be announced") is also used to describe a specific type of simple mortgage investment, the forward mortgage-backed security. This is used to indicate that the investor is acquiring some portion of a pending pool of as-yet unspecified mortgages, which will be specified at a given delivery date.[8] This usage has existed at least since the 1980s.[b]
See also
[edit]- A. N. Other, sometimes ANO, Ann Other
- Nomen nescio or NN
- n/a
- To be continued
Notes
[edit]- ^ See, for example, Indianapolis Monthly: Volume 32, Issues 5–9 (2008), stating: "INDIANAPOLIS COLTS It's playoff time. Can the Colts pick off their rivals one by one, or will they fall victim to last year's heartbreaking turn of events? Ticket prices and opponents TBD."
- ^ See Bureau of National Affairs, Securities Regulation & Law Report: Volume 16 (1984), p. 1765, noting that "[t]he transactions in question at FCA were TBA (to be announced) Ginnie Mae forward contracts..."
References
[edit]- ^ Forsberg, Kevin; Mooz, Hal; Cotterman, Harry (2005). Visualizing Project Management: Models and Frameworks for Mastering Complex Systems. Wiley. p. 161. ISBN 0471746746.
- ^ Yilmaz, Levent (2015). Concepts and Methodologies for Modeling and Simulation. Springer. p. 205. ISBN 978-3319150963.
- ^ Luntz, Frank (2007). Words That Work: It's Not What You Say, It's What People Hear. Hyperion Books. p. 189. ISBN 978-1401302597.
- ^ Schwartz, Robert J. (1955). The Complete Dictionary of Abbreviations.
- ^ De Sola, Ralph (1967). Abbreviations Dictionary. Meredith Press.
- ^ "BBFC Age Ratings for Exhibitors". British Board of Film Classification. August 14, 2020. Archived from the original on January 23, 2021. Retrieved January 17, 2021.
- ^ "Using BBFC Age Ratings for Exhibitors". www.bbfc.co.uk. British Board of Film Classification. 2022-12-01. Retrieved 2024-08-22.
- ^ Kolb, Robert W.; Overdahl, James A. (2009). Financial Derivatives: Pricing and Risk Management. Wiley. p. 141. ISBN 978-0470499108.
To be announced
View on GrokipediaTerminology
Definition of TBA
"To be announced," abbreviated as TBA, is a placeholder term used to indicate that a scheduled event, detail, or decision is expected to occur or be revealed but has not yet been finalized or disclosed.[5] This abbreviation signals that information is forthcoming, often in contexts where the overall framework, such as a date or timeframe, is established, but specific elements remain pending. It conveys a sense of anticipation while avoiding premature commitments, distinguishing it from terms implying uncertainty about occurrence.[3] Key characteristics of TBA include its application in scenarios where timing is confirmed, yet particulars like participants, location, or exact content are not yet available, thereby maintaining schedule integrity without overpromising details.[6] The full phrase "to be announced" originates from formal notices and announcements, where it serves as a standard way to denote pending information in official communications.[7] TBA is typically formatted in uppercase for visibility and emphasis in listings, schedules, or programs, and it is pronounced as the individual letters /ˌtiː biː ˈeɪ/ (T-B-A).[5][7]Distinctions from TBC and TBD
While "to be announced" (TBA) refers to information that is set to be publicly revealed at a later time, "to be confirmed" (TBC) specifically denotes a tentative arrangement or detail that requires official verification before it can be finalized. This distinction arises because TBC implies an existing proposal or plan that awaits validation from relevant parties, such as organizers or authorities, rather than a complete absence of information.[8] For instance, TBC is commonly applied in professional schedules where preliminary details exist but depend on external approval.[9] In contrast, "to be determined" (TBD), also known as "to be decided," signals an unresolved element where no decision has yet been reached, even at a preliminary level.[10] This abbreviation highlights open-ended choices, such as selecting from multiple options without a favored direction.[11] Unlike TBA, which assumes the content is prepared for eventual disclosure, or TBC, which assumes a draft needing endorsement, TBD emphasizes the need for active deliberation to establish the parameter itself.[12] The core differences lie in their focus: TBA centers on the timing of public revelation, assuming the details are internally settled; TBC emphasizes validation of an existing proposal; and TBD prioritizes the decision-making process to resolve uncertainty.[11][13] These nuances affect their implications in planning, where misapplication can lead to mismatched expectations—for example, using TBC for something truly undecided risks implying premature commitment. Interchangeability is limited; substituting one for another may introduce ambiguity, as TBA and TBD are more aligned in indicating future action, while TBC suggests nearer-term finality.[12]| Abbreviation | Primary Focus | Implication | Common Contexts | Risk of Interchangeability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TBA | Announcement timing | Details exist but withheld for public release | Event schedules, media releases | High with TBD (both future-oriented), low with TBC (verification vs. revelation) |
| TBC | Verification process | Tentative plan awaits confirmation | Professional notices, bookings | Moderate; can overlap with TBA if confirmation leads to announcement, but differs from TBD's indecision |
| TBD | Decision resolution | No choice made; open for determination | Project planning, undecided parameters | High with TBA (both unresolved publicly), low with TBC (indecision vs. pending approval) |
