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deadlocks
noun
Plural of deadlock
Exact(59)
However this logic does not hold: when adjusted proportionally per game, the deadlocks have still been frequent, averaging a quarter of all matches.Football's governing body, FIFA, attempted to rectify the increase in draws by introducing penalty shoot-outs in place of replays, and the "Golden Goal" (sudden death) rule.
As recently as April, a leading Hamas official had said that he "liked" the Democrat, and hoped he would win.Yet there remains a strong underlying desire, in a region that has come to despair of ever breaking its multiple deadlocks, that regime change in America could reverberate positively here.
A third is to create a board of outside grandees to help break political deadlocks, like the Base Realignment and Closure commission, which was able to prod Congress to shut down military bases.
Thus, the deadlocks between the chief executive and the Congress that occur from time to time in the United States cannot occur in the British system.
Hence, deadlock must be detected by some scheme that incorporates substantial communication among network sites and careful synchronization, lest network delays cause deadlocks to be falsely detected and processes aborted unnecessarily.
Another approach is simply to allow deadlocks to occur, detect them by examining nonactive processes and the resources they are holding, and break any deadlock by aborting one of the processes in the chain and releasing its resources.
But Mr Tsipras appeared to remain defiant and officials in Brussels cautioned that, given the deadlocks that have arisen at almost every summit and ministerial meeting since Mr Tsipras came to power in January, there was only a slim hope of progress.
All this made for a series of deadlocks in German politics that would increasingly affect foreign policy after Bismarck's departure.
A complete line of these commodities could be kept in suspended animation in lockers, ready to be thawed...& served to the correct constituency at a moments notice in case of unexpected scandals, special elections, convention deadlocks, ethnic imbalance, or mass nerve, such as afflicted the N.Y.
What started out as a festival of soccer has turned into a grim, physical grind, dominated by defensive formations that rely on mistakes by the other team, and breakaway goals, to end deadlocks.
Sometimes Japanese officials quietly welcome "gaiatsu," or foreign pressure, to help resolve their own bureaucratic deadlocks.
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