Veto
['viːtəʊ] or ['vito]
Definition
(noun.) a vote that blocks a decision.
(noun.) the power or right to prohibit or reject a proposed or intended act (especially the power of a chief executive to reject a bill passed by the legislature).
(verb.) vote against; refuse to endorse; refuse to assent; 'The President vetoed the bill'.
Edited by Josie--From WordNet
Definition
(n.) An authoritative prohibition or negative; a forbidding; an interdiction.
(n.) A power or right possessed by one department of government to forbid or prohibit the carrying out of projects attempted by another department; especially, in a constitutional government, a power vested in the chief executive to prevent the enactment of measures passed by the legislature. Such a power may be absolute, as in the case of the Tribunes of the People in ancient Rome, or limited, as in the case of the President of the United States. Called also the veto power.
(n.) The exercise of such authority; an act of prohibition or prevention; as, a veto is probable if the bill passes.
(n.) A document or message communicating the reasons of the executive for not officially approving a proposed law; -- called also veto message.
(v. t.) To prohibit; to negative; also, to refuse assent to, as a legislative bill, and thus prevent its enactment; as, to veto an appropriation bill.
Typist: Patricia
Synonyms and Synonymous
n. Prohibition (of a legislative act by the Executive), refusal to sanction.
v. a. Prohibit, forbid, negative.
Typist: Weldon
Definition
n. any authoritative prohibition: the power of rejecting or forbidding:—pl. Vetoes (vē′tōz).—v.t. to reject by a veto: to withhold assent to.—Absolute veto a veto without restriction.
Inputed by Henrietta
Examples
- Or a benefactor's veto might impose such a negation on a man's life that the consequent blank might be more cruel than the benefaction was generous. George Eliot. Middlemarch.
- As before, Edison was allotted to press report, and remembers very distinctly taking the Presidential message and veto of the District of Columbia bill by President Johnson. Frank Lewis Dyer. Edison, His Life and Inventions.
- The plebeian power to stop business by the veto of their representatives, the tribunes, was fully exercised. H. G. Wells. The Outline of History_Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind.
- He could even carry his free veto, his _liberum veto_, further. H. G. Wells. The Outline of History_Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind.
- One dissentient on the council could bar any proposal--on the lines of the old Polish _liberum veto_ (chapter xxxvi, § 7). H. G. Wells. The Outline of History_Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind.
Editor: Pierre