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Ballot   /bˈælət/   Listen
noun
Ballot  n.  
1.
Originally, a ball used for secret voting. Hence: Any printed or written ticket used in voting.
2.
The act of secret voting, whether by balls, written or printed ballots or tickets, or by use of a voting machine; the system of voting secretly. "The insufficiency of the ballot."
3.
The whole number of votes cast at an election, or in a given territory or electoral district.
4.
The official list of candidates competing in an election. "There are no women on the ballot."
Ballot box,
(a)
a box for receiving ballots.
(b)
the act, process or system of voting secretly; same as ballot (2). "The question will be resolved by the ballot box."



verb
Ballot  v. t.  To vote for or in opposition to. "None of the competitors arriving to a sufficient number of balls, they fell to ballot some others."



Ballot  v. i.  (past & past part. balloted; pres. part. balloting)  To vote or decide by ballot; as, to ballot for a candidate.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Ballot" Quotes from Famous Books



... council of five hundred, fifty from each tribe, supplanted Solon's council of four hundred. The courts of law were newly organized. The Ostracism was introduced; that is, the prerogative of the popular assembly to decree by secret ballot, without trial, the banishment of a person who should be deemed to be dangerous to the public weal. Certain officers were designated by lot. Ten Strategi, one from each tribe, by turns, took the place of the archon polemarchus in ...
— Outline of Universal History • George Park Fisher

... grandfather to the ladies: "he takes the trouble all on my account." This expression anticipated the result,—he was made /Schultheiss/. And what rendered the circumstance particularly remarkable was, that, although his representative was the third and last to draw at the ballot, the two silver balls first came out, leaving the golden ball at the bottom ...
— Autobiography • Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

... Annual Meeting, shall elect, by ballot, a President, two Vice-Presidents, Corresponding Secretary, Recording Secretary, Treasurer, Librarian, and five Censors, who shall together constitute an Executive Committee, to whom shall be intrusted the general business of the Society ...
— The Act Of Incorporation And The By-Laws Of The Massachusetts Homeopathic Medical Society • Massachusetts Homoeopathic Medical Society

... consistent Liberal: always advocating such measures of reform as were calculated to remove abuses, while they in no way affected the stability and integrity of the institutions of the country. While, on the one hand, he has declared his most unequivocal opposition to the ballot and universal suffrage, on the other he has advocated popular education, as the ultimate panacea for all the evils to be feared from ...
— International Miscellany of Literature, Art and Science, Vol. 1, - No. 3, Oct. 1, 1850 • Various

... established of such and such a nature, beyond reasonable doubt; if the connection of the defendant has been clearly set forth," etc. As the penny sheet put it, "Judge Barstow's charge left no room for doubt as to the verdict. The jury was out forty minutes and took one ballot." Twelve men, be they farmers or "sore-heads," had found John Lane guilty of something very like grand larceny. The case ...
— Together • Robert Herrick (1868-1938)


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