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prorogation

noun

  1. postponing a date or deadline
L326026 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /pɹəʊɹəˈɡeɪʃn̩/

noun

Etymology: From Anglo-Norman prorogation, Middle French prorogation, and their source, Latin prōrogātiō (“extension, postponement”).

  1. Causing something to last longer or remain in effect longer; prolongation, continuance.
  2. The action of proroguing an assembly, especially a parliament; discontinuance of meetings for a given period of time, without dissolution.

    There were extraordinary scenes of chaos and anger in the House of Commons overnight as opposition MPs staged a protest against the suspension of parliament for five weeks – a prorogation that the Speaker of the House said represented “an act of executive fiat”.

  3. The period of such a discontinuance between two sessions of a legislative body.
  4. Deferral to a later time; postponement.