Definition of "guillotine" (historical, also figuratively) A machine used for the application of capital punishment by decapitation , consisting of a tall upright frame from which is suspended a heavy diagonal -edged blade which is dropped onto the neck of the person to be executed ; also , execution using this machine . quotations
Quotations For two -and -twenty years he [Joseph -Ignace Guillotin ], unguillotined , shall hear nothing but guillotine , see nothing but guillotine ; then dying , shall through long centuries wander , as it were , a disconsolate ghost , on the wrong side of Styx and Lethe ; his name like to outlive [Julius ] Cæsar ’s .
1837, Thomas Carlyle, “The Procession”, in The French Revolution: A History […], volume I (The Bastille), London: Chapman and Hall, book IV (States-General), pages 143–144
(by extension)
(law, politics, informal)
(Britain) A parliamentary procedure for fixing the dates when various stages of discussion of a bill must end , to ensure that the enactment of the bill proceeds expeditiously . quotations examples
Quotations The right hon . Gentleman is making a great stooshie about time in relation to this Bill , but was it not the case that , when the SNP [Scottish National Party ] Scottish Government introduced their continuity Bill in the Scottish Parliament , they operated a ruthless guillotine to prevent proper scrutiny of it? That is the case ; they ran a guillotine on that Bill , and there was a very limited amount of time allowed for debate and scrutiny , yet he complains about that happening here.
2019 October 22, Stephen Kerr, Member of Parliament for Stirling, “Second Reading of the European Union (Withdrawal Agreement) Bill”, in House of Commons Debates (House of Commons), volume 666, archived from the original on 24 October 2019, column 860
verb third-person singular simple present guillotines , present participle guillotining , simple past and past participle guillotined
(law, politics, informal)