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Re: Brexit
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The Oxford English Dictionary says no, but seeing as it’s behind a paywall the closest we can get to its wisdom is sadly via a discussion of it at Wikipedia ... https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Referendum In short, because it is coined in English as an English noun, and not according to its Latin usage, it should be pluralised according to English grammatical rules, not Latin ones. Hence referendums, not referenda. Dictionary.com is simply recording the fact that the word is used in that way, not necessarily that it is correct to do so. But we digress. :) |
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However yes, I agree with your point about general apathy. |
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I have just found out that the Tory MP leavers want to build a wall straight up the middle of the English channel.:D
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https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dic...ish/referendum Or even Oxford Living Distionaries. https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/referendum From example sentences. Quote:
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Side point: ianch99's link referenced Collins (a UK publisher not US) and it has referenda available as a plural. My preference is referendums for as you say, referendum has been brought into the English language. https://www.collinsdictionary.com/di...ish/referendum |
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If a word is used incorrectly enough it gets defined that way.
It literally kills me when it happens. |
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Meanwhile, Theresa May could be facing a coup if she loses the vote on Tuesday. The Sunday Times reports that a cross-party group of backbenchers are planning to take control of exit talks if her plan falls through. https://www.cableforum.uk/images/local/2019/01/8.jpg |
Re: Brexit
I did spot a link to that on Twitter, wasn’t 100% sure how to link to the image. A genuinely interesting article that frames the difficulty of our ‘unwritten’ constitution.
It’s based on norms and common practice. It doesn’t specify an arbiter or ultimate decision maker. The supremacy of the Commons over the Lords is in statute in the Parliament Act. The belief is that the will of Government and Parliament can’t be too far apart. In normal times that would be true, a Government would be free to drop a policy it viewed as too contentious, or to make a deal in common ground. Generally a Government wouldn’t be able to be held to ransom by the DUP, or even a jilted ex-Minister and a few friends. We’ve got a Chancellor who is in the role because May can’t remove him These are truly uncharted waters. The Government is presently in contempt of Parliament, a situation that can only embolden the Speaker. If the Government seeks to remove Bercow that only increases the crisis. Our political system wasn’t designed for a situation where a Government pushes a policy that the majority of MPs oppose, yet it could very well win a vote of confidence. |
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Would rather see A50 extended and an acceptable deal worked out, than dropping of a cliff edge into no deal. Before the referendum was called, I suspect no thought whatsoever was given to the NI border issues relating to the GFA. May getting into bed with the DUP has hampered negotiations ever since, but the election results meant to govern she needed other support. Adversarial politics mean we are where we are. |
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UK Politics: News Referendums or referenda? Quote:
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