Parliament
from
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
parliament
n 1: a legislative assembly in certain countries
2: a card game in which you play your sevens and other cards in
sequence in the same suit as the sevens; you win if you are
the first to use all your cards [syn: {fantan}, {sevens},
{parliament}]
from
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Parliament \Par"lia*ment\, n. [OE. parlement, F. parlement, fr.
parler to speak; cf. LL. parlamentum, parliamentum. See
{Parley}.]
1. A parleying; a discussion; a conference. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]
But first they held their parliament. --Rom. of R.
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2. A formal conference on public affairs; a general council;
esp., an assembly of representatives of a nation or people
having authority to make laws.
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They made request that it might be lawful for them
to summon a parliament of Gauls. --Golding.
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3. The assembly of the three estates of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Ireland, viz., the lords spiritual,
lords temporal, and the representatives of the commons,
sitting in the House of Lords and the House of Commons,
constituting the legislature, when summoned by the royal
authority to consult on the affairs of the nation, and to
enact and repeal laws.
[1913 Webster]
Note: Thought the sovereign is a constituting branch of
Parliament, the word is generally used to denote the
three estates named above.
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4. In France, before the Revolution of 1789, one of the
several principal judicial courts.
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{Parliament heel}, the inclination of a ship when made to
careen by shifting her cargo or ballast.
{Parliament hinge} (Arch.), a hinge with so great a
projection from the wall or frame as to allow a door or
shutter to swing back flat against the wall.
{Long Parliament}, {Rump Parliament}. See under {Long}, and
{Rump}.
[1913 Webster]
from
Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)
PARLIAMENT. This word, derived from the French parlement, in the English
law, is used to designate the legislative branch of the government of Great
Britain, composed of the house of lords, and the house of commons.
2. It is an error to regard the king of Great Britain as forming a part
of parliament. The connexion between the king and the lords spiritual, the
lords temporal, and the commons, which, when assembled in parliament, form
the, three states of the realm, is the same as that which subsists between
the king and those states -- the people at large -- out of parliament;
Colton's Records, 710; the king not being, in either case, a member, branch,
or co-estate, but standing solely in the relation of sovereign or head.
Rot. Par. vol. iii,. 623 a.; 2 Mann. & Gr. 457 n.
from
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
33 Moby Thesaurus words for "parliament":
Parliament, assembly, bicameral legislature, board of aldermen,
chamber of deputies, city board, city council, commission,
common council, congress, council, court, diet, federal assembly,
general assembly, house of assembly, legislative assembly,
legislative body, legislative chamber, legislature, lower chamber,
lower house, national assembly, provincial legislature,
provincial parliament, representative town meeting, soviet,
state assembly, state legislature, town meeting,
unicameral legislature, upper chamber, upper house
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