No overall control, a term used in the United Kingdom to refer to a situation analogous to a hung parliament, whereby no political party commands an absolute majority on a local council.
This is a disambiguation page which serves to distinguish topics that share a common name.
Disambiguation pages are navigational aids which list other pages that might otherwise share the same title. If an article link referred to this page, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page. National Olympic Committees are the national constituents of the worldwide olympic movement. ... For months before the Olympic Games, runners relay the Olympic Flame from Olympia to the opening ceremony. ... A Network Operations Center is the location from which control is exercised over a communications network, usually either telephony or internet, though sometimes also that of a public utility (see also SCADA). ... The Nippon Oil Corporation (NOC, ENEOS) is a Japanese company. ... Nonofficial cover is a term used in espionage (particularly by the CIA) for an agent or operative who assumes a covert role in an organization without ties to the government he or she is working for. ... In Parliamentary systems, a hung parliament is one in which no one political party has an outright majority. ... Absolute majority is a supermajoritarian voting requirement which is stricter than a simple majority. ... Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ...