supplementary enterprise - meaning and definition. What is supplementary enterprise
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What (who) is supplementary enterprise - definition

RANKED-CHOICE ELECTORAL SYSTEM
The Supplementary Vote; Sri Lankan contingent vote; Supplementary vote system; Sri Lankan Supplementary Vote; The supplementary vote; The Supplementary vote; Sri Lankan supplementary vote; Sri Lanka supplementary vote; Sri Lanka Supplementary Vote; Supplementary voting system; Contingent voting
  • optional preferential]] ballot paper.

Enterprise (NX-01)         
FICTIONAL SPACECRAFT FROM STAR TREK: ENTERPRISE
NX-01 Enterprise; NX-01; Enterprise NX-01; Akiraprise; Nx01; Nx01 enterprise; ISS Enterprise (NX-01); USS Enterprise (NX-01)
Enterprise NX-01 is a fictional spaceship that appears in the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise. It had the in-universe registration of NX-01 and appeared earlier in the franchise timeline than any other Starfleet ship named Enterprise.
Unitary enterprise         
TYPE OF BUSINESS ENTITY IN RUSSIA
Unitary enterprize; Unitary Enterprise; Federal State Unitary Enterprise; State Unitary Enterprise; Municipal Unitary Enterprise; FSUE; State unitary enterprise
A unitary enterprise () is a government-owned corporation in Russia and some other post-Soviet states. Unitary enterprises are business entities that have no ownership rights to the assets that they use in their operations. This form is possible only for state and municipal enterprises, which respectively operate state or municipal property. The owners of the property of a unitary enterprise have no responsibility for its operation and vice versa.
USSD         
COMMUNICATIONS PROTOCOL
Unstructured supplementary service; Supplementary service string; USSD; USSD codes; USSD code; Ussd; GSM Man-Machine Interface
UnStructured Supplementary Services (Reference: GSM, mobile-systems)

Wikipedia

Contingent vote

The contingent vote is an electoral system used to elect a single representative in which a candidate requires a majority of votes to win. It is a variation of instant-runoff voting (IRV). Under the contingent vote, the voter ranks the candidates in order of preference, and the first preference votes are counted. If no candidate has a majority (more than half the votes cast), then all but the two leading candidates are eliminated and the votes received by the eliminated candidates are distributed among the two remaining candidates according to voters' preferences. This ensures that one candidate achieves a majority and is declared elected.

The contingent vote differs from IRV which allows for many rounds of counting, eliminating only one weakest candidate each round. IRV allows a small chance the candidate outside the top two can still win. The contingent vote can also be considered a compressed form of the two-round system (runoff system), in which both 'rounds' occur without the need for voters to go to the polls twice.

Today, a special variant of the contingent vote is used to elect the President of Sri Lanka. Another variant, called the supplementary vote, is used to pick directly elected mayors and police and crime commissioners in England. In the past the ordinary form of the contingent vote was used to elect the Legislative Assembly of Queensland from 1892 to 1942. To date, this has been the longest continuous use of the system anywhere in the world. It was also used in the US state of Alabama in the 1920s.