• Convention

    Pronunciation

    • UK IPA: /kÉ™nˈvÉ›n.ʃən/, /ˈkÉ’nËŒvÉ›n.ʃən/

    Origin

    Recorded since c. 1440, from Middle French convention, from Latin conventiō ("meeting, assembling; agreement, convention"), from conveniō ("come, gather or meet together, assemble"), from con- ("with, together") + veniō ("come").

    Full definition of convention

    Noun

    convention

    (plural conventions)
    1. A meeting or gathering.The convention was held in Geneva.
      • 2012, May 30, Katherine Stewart, How Christian fundamentalists plan to teach genocide to schoolchildren, The CEF and the legal advocacy groups that have been responsible for its tremendous success over the past ten years are determined to "Knock down all doors, all the barriers, to all 65,000 public elementary schools in America and take the Gospel to this open mission field now! Not later, now!" in the words of a keynote speaker at the CEF's national convention in 2010.
    2. A formal deliberative assembly of mandated delegates''The EU installed an inter-institutional Convention to draft a European constitution
    3. The convening of a formal meeting
    4. A formal agreement, contract or pact
    5. (international law) A treaty or supplement to such.''The Vienna convention at the Vienna Congress (1814-15) standardized most of diplomatic conduct for generations
    6. A generally accepted principle, method or behaviour.
      • 1988, Andrew Radford, Transformational grammar: a first courseIn order to account for this, we might propose to make the Prepositional Phrase an optional constituent of the Verb Phrase: this we could do by re-
        placing rule (28) (ii) by rule (40) below:
    (40)      VP → V AP (PP)
    (Note that a constituent in parentheses is, by convention, taken to be
    optional.)
    1. ''Table seatings are generally determined by tacit convention, not binding formal protocolThe convention of driving on the right is reinforced by law.
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