en clôture
51cloture — clo|ture [ˈkləutʃə US ˈkloutʃər] n AmE technical [Date: 1800 1900; : French; Origin: clôture closure , from Old French closure, from Latin clausura, from claudere; CLOSE1] a way of ending an argument over a ↑bill in the US government and forcing… …
52Cloture — Clo|ture [klo ty:r] die; , n [...rən] <aus fr. clôture »Einzäunung, Einfried(ig)ung; Klausur« zu lat. clausura> (veraltet) 1. Einfriedung. 2. (ohne Plur.) klösterliche Abgeschlossenheit. 3. Rechnungsabschluss …
53cloture — (KLOH cher) [French, from Latin: barrier; cloister] A maneuver to stop debate in a legislative body in order to have an immediate vote on a question. He had a greater task remaining before him than cobbling together a Republican majority… …
54cloture — [ kləʊtjʊə] noun & verb US term for closure (in sense 3 of the noun and as a verb). Origin C19: from Fr. clôture, from OFr. closure …
55clôture — aptvara statusas T sritis automatika atitikmenys: angl. barrage; enclosure vok. Sperre, f rus. заграждение, n pranc. clôture, f …
56cloture — clo|ture [ kloutʃər ] noun uncount TECHNICAL the process of stopping a debate in the U.S. Senate by forcing the members to vote immediately on the bill being discussed …
57cloture — clo·ture || kləʊtʃə n. act of ending a discussion with a vote; closure v. close a discussion, end a discussion with a vote …
58cloture — coulter …
59cloture — noun (C) AmE technical a way of ending an argument over a bill 1 (2) in the US government and forcing a vote on it …
60cloture — clo·ture …