extrinsic nerve supply - significado y definición. Qué es extrinsic nerve supply
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Qué (quién) es extrinsic nerve supply - definición

FAILURE OF BUDGET LEGISLATION IN A PARLIAMENTARY SYSTEM
Denial of supply; Loss of Supply; Refused supply; Refuse supply

Labour supply         
  • This [[backward bending supply curve of labour]] shows how the change in [[real wage]] rates affects the number of hours worked by employees.
TOTAL HOURS THAT WORKERS WISH TO WORK AT A GIVEN REAL WAGE RATE
Labor supply; Labor supply curve; Labour supply curve; Supply of labor; Labor Supply
In mainstream economic theories, the labour supply is the total hours (adjusted for intensity of effort) that workers wish to work at a given real wage rate. It is frequently represented graphically by a labour supply curve, which shows hypothetical wage rates plotted vertically and the amount of labour that an individual or group of individuals is willing to supply at that wage rate plotted horizontally.
waterworks         
  • A girl collects clean water from a communal water supply in [[Kawempe]], [[Uganda]].
  • Engine room of municipal water works in Toledo, Ohio, 1908
  • Herne Bay Museum]]
  • The sole water supply of this section of Wilder, Tennessee, 1942
  • Shipot, a common source of drinking water in [[Dzyhivka]], [[Ukraine]]
  • Water supplied by a truck in [[Kolhapur]], Maharashtra, India
  • [[Cape Town water crisis]] warning, July 2018
  • A typical residential water meter
  • ''Wasserkunst'' and fountain from 1602 in [[Wismar]], Germany. It's an example of pre-industrialization waterworks and fountain.
PROVISION OF WATER BY PUBLIC UTILITIES, COMMERCIAL ORGANISATIONS, COMMUNITY ENDEAVORS OR BY INDIVIDUALS
Waterworks; Water source; Water Supply and Waterworks; Water-Supply; Water supply engineering; Public water supply; Supply water; Water-works; Water supplies; Water-supply engineering; Water provider
n. a municipal waterworks
waterworks         
  • A girl collects clean water from a communal water supply in [[Kawempe]], [[Uganda]].
  • Engine room of municipal water works in Toledo, Ohio, 1908
  • Herne Bay Museum]]
  • The sole water supply of this section of Wilder, Tennessee, 1942
  • Shipot, a common source of drinking water in [[Dzyhivka]], [[Ukraine]]
  • Water supplied by a truck in [[Kolhapur]], Maharashtra, India
  • [[Cape Town water crisis]] warning, July 2018
  • A typical residential water meter
  • ''Wasserkunst'' and fountain from 1602 in [[Wismar]], Germany. It's an example of pre-industrialization waterworks and fountain.
PROVISION OF WATER BY PUBLIC UTILITIES, COMMERCIAL ORGANISATIONS, COMMUNITY ENDEAVORS OR BY INDIVIDUALS
Waterworks; Water source; Water Supply and Waterworks; Water-Supply; Water supply engineering; Public water supply; Supply water; Water-works; Water supplies; Water-supply engineering; Water provider
(waterworks)
A waterworks is a building where a supply of water is stored and cleaned before being distributed to the public.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Loss of supply

Loss of supply occurs where a government in a parliamentary democracy using the Westminster System or a system derived from it is denied a supply of treasury or exchequer funds, by whichever house or houses of parliament or head of state is constitutionally entitled to grant and deny supply. A defeat on a budgetary vote is one way by which supply can be denied. Loss of supply is typically interpreted as indicating a loss of confidence in the government. Not all "money bills" are necessarily supply bills. For instance, in Australia, supply bills are defined as "bills which are required by the Government to carry on its day-to-day business".

When a loss of supply occurs, a prime minister is generally required either by constitutional convention or by explicit constitutional instruction to either resign immediately or seek a parliamentary dissolution.

Some constitutions, however, do not allow the option of parliamentary dissolution but rather require the government to be dissolved or to resign.

A similar deadlock can occur within a presidential system, where it is also known as a budget crisis. In contrast to parliamentary systems, the failure of the legislature to authorize spending may not in all circumstances result in an election, because some such legislatures enjoy fixed terms and so cannot be dissolved before a date of termination, which can result in a prolonged crisis.

A deadlock between a head of state and the legislative body can give rise and cause for a head of state to prematurely dismiss the elected government, requiring it to seek re-election. If a government maintains the support of a majority of legislators or the elected parliamentary representatives, the blocking of supply by a head of state would be seen as an abuse of authority and power. Many western countries have removed or restricted the right of a head of state to block supply or veto a government budget unless there is overwhelming justification and cause for such action.