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Full term, in regards to preganancy, refers to a woman carrying a baby for the full nine months. It is the end of gestation ie the end of 40 weeks from the first day of the mother's last menstrual period.
Full Stop is also the name for a campaign by the NSPCC to prevent child abuse.
A full stop or period, also called a full point, is the punctuation mark commonly placed at the end of several different types of sentences in English and several other languages.
The termfull stop is less common in the United States and Canada, but is generally differentiated from period in contexts where both might be used: a full stop is specifically a delimiting piece of punctuation that represents the end a sentence.
Theodore Roosevelt, who served from 1901 to 1909, sought to be elected in 1912 (non-consecutively) for a second time—he had succeeded to the presidency on William McKinley's assassination and already been elected in 1904 to a fullterm himself—but he lost to Woodrow Wilson.
If a person serving as vice president succeeds to the presidency, and serves for less than two years of the original president's term, he or she may still be elected twice and thus serve a total of ten full years in office.
Sherman Adams quotes Dwight Eisenhower expressing in a press conference his strong opposition to term limits: "The United States ought to be able to choose for its President anybody it wants, regardless of the number of terms he has served" ("First Hand Report", 1961, p.