1. timetable - Noun
2. timetable - Verb
a tabular schedule of events with the times at which they occur, especially times of arrivals and departures
The timetable has been changed several times since it was first announced.
Synonyms: schedule, timeline
A schedule of arrivals and departures published in book or booklet form, or as a pamphlet, and available to travellers, either free or for a charge.
timetable (third-person singular simple present timetables, present participle timetabling, simple past and past participle timetabled)
(transitive) To arrange a specific time for (an event, a class, etc).
I've timetabled the meeting for Monday afternoon.
Synonym: schedule
To state a timetable now would simply paralyze the proper working of government, put at risk the changes we are making for Britain and damage the country. Tony Blair
No military timetable should compel war when a successful outcome, namely a disarmed Iraq may be feasible without war, for example by allowing more time to the UN inspectors. Douglas Hurd
Someone once asked me what my working timetable was like and when was the last time I went on a holiday. I said about 20 years back. I don't work anymore, because I get paid to do what I like most. So it's like a paid holiday. Kamal Haasan
As I have been saying for more than a year now, turning this vital mission over to the Iraqi people as soon as possible should remain a topic of debate for Congress while relying on our military commanders to set up the timetable. Howard Coble
Conventional wisdom holds that setting a timetable for getting American troops out of Iraq would be a mistake. Nick Clooney
If I had been under ObamaCare, and a beaurocrat had been trying to tell me when I could get that CT scan, that would have delayed my treatment. I was able to get the treatment as fast as I could based upon my timetable, and not the government's timetable. That's what saved my life. Herman Cain