User:Meommy89

quorum /ˈkwɔːrəm/ noun 1. a minimum number of members in an assembly, society, board of directors, etc, required to be present before any valid business can be transacted: the quorum is forty, we don't have a quorum Word Origin 1425-75; < Latin quōrum of whom; from a use of the word in commissions written in Latin specifying a quorum

I also have a Ph.D, try not to get ahead of yourself when trying to define something you are not in or have personal knowledge about. This website is to help people understand the world as it was, is and will be. Do not try and prove you know something for which you do not. The definition you are trying to imply is being adapted from its original form into a new complex form. However, that does not make the current definition wrong or its use wrong. As in everything evolutions plays a part, try to remember that when you post a comment.Cristykay (talk) 04:13, 20 October 2016 (UTC)