PARLIAMENT. This word, derived from the French parlement, in the
English law, is used to designate the legislative branch of the
government of Great Britain, composed of the house of lords, and the
house of commons.
2. It is an error to regard the king of Great Britain as forming a part
of parliament. The connexion between the king and the Iords spiritual,
the lords temporal, and the commons, which, when assembled in
parliament, form the, three states of the realm, is the same as that
which subsists between the king and those states - the people at large -
out of parliament; Colton's Records, 710; the king not being, in either
case, a member, branch, or coestate, but standing solely in the
relation of sovereign or head. Rot. Par. vol. iii,. 623 a.; 2 Mann.
& Gr. 457 n.
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