Suggestions(5)
Dictionary
logjam
noun
An excess of logs being conveyed on a river, so that their motion halts.
Exact(8)
In theory, the logjam could be broken at any time in the coming days.
It also suggests that appealing directly to public opinion over the heads of his opponents in Congress a tactic successfully used by Ronald Reagan and Mr Clinton will be very difficult for Mr Bush.One of Mr Bush's campaign promises was to break the partisan legislative logjam in Washington.
Still, the biggest move towards unblocking the logjam would be for Turkey to squeeze Mr Denktash, as it certainly could, into giving the necessary extra few inches.
This week's USCR report estimates there are 13m refugees, half of whom are Afghans and Palestinians.The State Department insists the logjam is beginning to break.
IT WAS a tricky few days for Barack Obama in his latest bid to please the Arab world in general and, more specifically, to break the logjam between Palestinians and Israelis.
When he was elected chancellor, he promised, after all, to end the Reformstau (the reform logjam) that had spoiled the last years of Helmut Kohl's long chancellorship.
The logjam could worsen as the sunbelt's population booms.So what could be more pragmatic than a bill introduced this week by Senator John Ensign of Nevada to split the court into three smaller ones?
One would be a growing logjam of legislation, concentrated in policy areas that need unanimous agreement by all EU members.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com