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Adjourn   /ədʒˈərn/   Listen
Adjourn

verb
(past & past part. adjourned; pres. part. adjourning)
1.
Close at the end of a session.  Synonyms: break up, recess.
2.
Break from a meeting or gathering.  Synonyms: retire, withdraw.  "The men retired to the library"



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"Adjourn" Quotes from Famous Books



... would have been thrown out. The newspapers throughout the two Provinces, with half-a dozen honorable exceptions, were vile and vicious, as trans-Atlantic newspapers especially can be. I was full of unexpected anxiety. The Government tactics were Fabian; and on the 5th April they decided to adjourn the House to the 23rd. So I went home in the "China" from New York on the 9th April with my son; saw the Duke of Newcastle, discussed the situation; saw the opening of the Great Exhibition of 1862 on the 1st May, and a few ...
— Canada and the States • Edward William Watkin

... "Anyhow, I vote we adjourn this meeting," said Cupid, recovering from a fresh cough and splutter. "Or old Gurley'll be coming in to put me on a mustard plaster.—As for you, Infant, if you take the advice of a chap who has seen ...
— The Getting of Wisdom • Henry Handel Richardson

... so on one condition," Very responded with a laugh, "that is, that we now adjourn to the parlor, and you will favor us with ...
— The Kentucky Ranger • Edward T. Curnick

... generally allowed in the public hall, except to the "high table," that is, the table at which the fellows and some other privileged persons are entitled to dine. The head of the college rarely dines in public. The other tables, and, after dinner, the high table, usually adjourn to their wine, either upon invitations to private parties, or to what are called the "common rooms" of the several orders—graduates and undergraduates, &c. The dinners are always plain, and without pretensions—those, I mean, in ...
— Memorials and Other Papers • Thomas de Quincey

... certainly at this date to be living in a land in which 'tis always afternoon. In one house or another tea-time goes on until signs of dinner make their appearance. The boys only move from one hospitable dining-room to another, or adjourn to their own bedrooms where Gilbert piles book on book and reduces even neat shelves to the same chaos that reigns ...
— Gilbert Keith Chesterton • Maisie Ward


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