Caucus (pronounced kaw-kuhs)
(1) In US politics, a meeting of party members within a legislative body to select leaders and determine strategy; a meeting to select candidates, elect convention delegates, etc (now mostly replaced by primaries); a faction within a legislative body that pursues its interests through the legislative process (often initial capital letter). Also used to a lesser extent in the UK.
(2) Any group or meeting organized to further a special interest or cause.
(3) As a verb, such a meeting (with or without the object).
(4) In Australian, Canadian and New Zealand politics, a meeting of a party (in NZ use restricted to Labour, in Australia to Labor).
1755–1765, An Americanism; etymologists contest the origin. It may have been inspired by a private club in colonial Boston at which politicians met to discuss politics and, because the men consumed much tobacco and drink, the source may be the Medieval Latin caucus (drinking vessel), from the Late Latin caucum from the Greek kaûkos. An alternative view links it to the Virginia Algonquian word cawaassough or caucauasu (counselor, elder, adviser) but this has little scholarly support. An analogical Latin-type plural cauc is occasionally used but the almost universal plural form is caucuses.
Nibblin' Joe Biden (b 1942; US president since 2021) and his wife, Dr Jill Biden (b 1951) at a campaign stop during the Iowa Caucuses, Council Bluffs, Iowa, 30 November, 2019.
Primary (pronounced prahy-mer-ee or prahy-muh-ree)
(1) First or highest in rank or importance; chief; principal; first in order in any series, sequence etc; first in time; earliest; primitive; constituting or belonging to the first stage in any process.
(2) Of, relating to, or characteristic of primary school, the entry level for formal childhood education.
(3) Of the nature of the ultimate or simpler constituents of which something complex is made up.
(4) Original; not derived or subordinate; fundamental; basic.
(5) In scholarship, pertaining to or being a first-hand account, original data etc, or based on direct knowledge, as in primary source; primary research.
(6) Immediate or direct, or not involving intermediate agency:
(7) In sociology, pertaining to social values or ideals, conceived as derived from the primary group and culturally defined as being necessary to the welfare of the individual and society.
(8) In ornithology, pertaining to any of the set of flight feathers situated on the distal segment of a bird's wing.
(9) In electrical engineering pertaining to the circuit, coil, winding, or current that induces current in secondary windings in a coil, transformer, or the like.
(10) In chemistry, involving or obtained by replacement of one atom or group; noting or containing a carbon atom united to no other or to only one other carbon atom in a molecule.
(11) In linguistics (of a derivative), having a root as the underlying form (ie derived from a word that is not a derivation but the ultimate form itself); As applied in the Latin, Greek, Sanskrit tenses, having reference to present or future time (as opposed to secondary).
(12) In US politics, (also known as a primary election), a preliminary election in which voters of each party nominate candidates for office, party officers.
(13) As primary (red, yellow, blue) colors, those which cannot be created by mixing other colors. In digital printing these exist as the CMYK set (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black).
(14) In astronomy, a body in relation to a smaller body or bodies revolving around it, as a planet in relation to its satellites; the brighter of the two stars comprising a double star.
(15) Of production or industry, involving the extraction or winning of such products (agriculture, fishing, forestry, hunting, and mining).
(16) In geology, relating to magmas that have not experienced fractional crystallization or crystal contamination.
(17) In the healthcare industry, the family doctor (US) or GP (Commonwealth), a patient’s initial payment point to enter the system.
1425–1475:
Late Middle English, from the Latin prīmārius
(of the first rank; chief, principal; excellent), from prīmus (first) + -ārius,
the Latin suffix used to form adjectives from nouns or numerals from the
primitive Indo-European relational adjectival suffix -yós (belonging to); from this English gained the suffix –ary.
In French the borrowing from the Latin became primaire, primer, and premier.
The Latin prīmārius is a derivation of prīmus (leading, foremost, furthest out, extreme, earliest, first) prīmus was formed from the primitive Indo-European per (forward, in front, through) and variants of the root appear in the Latin prefix, adverb, and preposition prae- & prae (in front, ahead) (adopted as pre- in English) and prō-, prō (implying forward motion, making an opening, priority in time or importance (source of English pro-). Variants of per appear in the Greek prōtos (first) and the Germanic (Old English) forma, formest, forth, furthra, fyrst, which, in English, became former, foremost, forth, further, first.
Lindsay Lohan in primary colors: yellow, red & blue.
Primary colors are the base set which can be mixed to create other colors. The classic three were red, blue & yellow but the advent of digital displays meant the model had to be refined and for most purposes the two systems are (1) CMKY and (2) RGB. The CMKY (cyan, magenta, yellow & key (black)) system is used in painting and printing and is a subtractive model, meaning that colors are created through absorbing wavelengths of visible light. Wavelengths not absorbed are reflected; that reflected light is the visible color spectrum. The RGB (red, green & blue) system applies to computers, televisions and other electronic displays. RGB is an additive model which means colors are created through light waves being combined in certain combinations.
US Caucuses and primaries
In presidential campaigns, a caucus is a system of local gatherings where people decide by public vote which candidate to support and select delegates for nominating conventions. Caucuses were once the most common way of choosing presidential nominees but now only five remain: Iowa, Kentucky, Nevada, North Dakota and Wyoming. Most often, only registered voters can participate in a caucus, and they are limited to the caucus of the party with which they are affiliated. Primaries are a direct, state-wide process of selecting candidates and delegates and, to the voter, differ hardly from other elections. Primaries come in two basic forms. In an open primary, all registered voters can vote for any candidate, regardless of their political affiliation. In a closed primary, voters may vote only for candidates of the party with which they are registered.
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