prorogate
1Prorogate — Pro ro*gate, v. t. To prorogue. [R.] [1913 Webster] …
2prorogate — index postpone Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
3prorogate — transitive verb ( gated; gating) Date: 1534 prorogue • prorogation noun …
4prorogate — pro·ro·gate …
5prorogate — ˈprōrəˌgāt transitive verb ( ed/ ing/ s) Etymology: Middle English prorogaten, from Latin prorogatus, past participle of prorogare 1. : prorogue 2. Scots law : to extend (a judge s jurisdiction) by consent …
6prorogation — noun see prorogate …
7Nagar Brahmins — Nagar Gujarati Brahmins are believed to be one of the oldest of the Brahmin groups. Contents 1 Overview 2 Origin of Nagars 3 Migration of Nagars 4 Narsinh Mehta (1414–1481) …
8Naagar — Nagars are believed to be one of the oldest of the brahman s groups.Origin of NagarsHistorians claim the origin of Nagars to be purely Aryan, having gone to India from Southern Europe and Central Asia. They migrated through the Hindu Kush to… …
9postpone — post·pone vt post·poned, post·pon·ing 1: to put off to a later time 2: to place later in precedence, preference, or importance; specif: to subordinate (a lien) to a later lien post·pon·able adj post·pone·ment n Merriam Webster’s Dictionary …
10wait — I verb abide, await, be patient, bear with composure, bide, continue, defer, delay, discontinue, extend, forbear, halt, hesitate, linger, loiter, mark time, pause, postpone, procrastinate, prorogate, protract, put off, remain, remand, reserve,… …