|
Assembly may refer to the following things: - In politics, any body meeting together to discuss matters, a parliament or a legislative assembly such as the French revolutionary Legislative Assembly, or a body more designed to mediate between otherwise independent bodies, such as the United Nations General Assembly.
- In mechanics, architecture and electronics, the action of putting together the separate parts of what is intended to be assembled. Modules, components or elements or combinations of such may be the objects of the assembly. "Assembly" may also refer to the whole that results from such action.
- Sometimes, in schools, a body collecting the students together for prayer, song, bible readings and a moral message, or things such as visits from authors or wildlife shelters.
- In Microsoft .NET, .NET assemblies are building blocks of an application, similar to a DLL (a Microsoft shared library), but in addition to containing executable code, an assembly also contains information found in a DLL's type library. The type library information in an assembly, called a manifest, describes public functions, data, classes and version info.
You might also mean: The Elections and Parties Series Democracy Representative democracy History of democracy Referenda Liberal democracy Representation Voting Voting systems Ideology Elections Elections by country Elections by calender Electoral systems Politics Politics by country Political campaigns Political science Political philosophy Related topics Political parties Parties by country Parties by name Parties by...
The debating chamber or hemicycle of the European Parliament in Brussels. ...
This article is about the term as used within the Commonwealth of Nations; there is also an Legislative Assembly in Oregon and there used to be a Legislative Assembly in France during the French Revolution. ...
United Nations General Assembly The United Nations General Assembly is one of the six principal organs of the United Nations. ...
Mechanics refers to: a craft relating to machinery (from the Latin mechanicus, from the Greek mechanikos, meaning one skilled in machines), or a range of disciplines in science and engineering. ...
Architecture (in Greek αÏÏή = first and ÏÎÏνη = craftsmanship) is the art and science of designing buildings and structures. ...
Two digital voltmeters The field of electronics is the study and use of electronic devices that operate by controlling the flow of electrons or other electrically charged particles in devices such as thermionic valves and semiconductors. ...
A school is most commonly a place designated for learning. ...
Prayer is an effort to communicate with God, or to some deity or deities, or another form of spiritual entity, or otherwise, either to offer praise, to make a request, or simply to express ones thoughts and emotions. ...
A song is a relatively short musical composition for the human voice (possibly accompanied by other musical instruments), which features words (lyrics). ...
The holy Jewish scripture: The Torah. ...
The word author has several meanings: The author of a book, story, article or the like, is the person who has written it (or is writing it). ...
[[Image:Microsoft_dotNET_Logo. ...
.NET Assemblies A . ...
Illustration of an application which may use libvorbisfile. ...
This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists pages that might otherwise share the same title. If an article link referred you here, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page. |