temporary abrogation or withholding, as of a law, privilege, decision, belief, etc.
stoppage of payment of debts or claims because of financial inability or insolvency.
Chemistry.
the state in which the particles of a substance are mixed with a fluid but are undissolved.
a substance in such a state.
Physical Chemistry. a system consisting of small particles kept dispersed by agitation (mechanical suspension ) or by the molecular motion in the surrounding medium (colloidal suspension ).
something on or by which something else is suspended or hung.
something that is suspended or hung.
Also called suspension system.the arrangement of springs, shock absorbers, hangers, etc., in an automobile, railway car, etc., connecting the wheel-suspension units or axles to the chassis frame.
Electricity. a wire, filament, or group of wires by which the conducting part of an instrument or device is suspended.
Music.
the prolongation of a tone in one chord into the following chord, usually producing a temporary dissonance.
the tone so prolonged.
Rhetoric. the heightening of interest by delay of the main subject or clause, especially by means of a series of parallel preceding elements.
Origin of suspension
1520–30; <Latin suspēnsiōn- (stem of suspēnsiō), equivalent to suspēns(us) (see suspense) + -iōn--ion
Early in the session the government requested the house to renew the act for the suspension of Habeas Corpus: it was granted.
The History of England in Three Volumes, Vol.III.|E. Farr and E. H. Nolan
Suspension is a punishment by which a party is temporarily deprived of his rights and privileges as a Mason.
The Principles of Masonic Law|Albert G. Mackey
With the first suspension, the rope broke; but the second attempt to hang the prisoner was successful.
Sixty Years in Southern California 1853-1913|Harris Newmark
British Dictionary definitions for suspension
suspension
/ (səˈspɛnʃən) /
noun
an interruption or temporary revocationthe suspension of a law
a temporary debarment, as from position, privilege, etc
a deferment, esp of a decision, judgment, etc
law
a postponement of execution of a sentence or the deferring of a judgment, etc
a temporary extinguishment of a right or title
cessation of payment of business debts, esp as a result of insolvency
the act of suspending or the state of being suspended
a system of springs, shock absorbers, etc, that supports the body of a wheeled or tracked vehicle and insulates it and its occupants from shocks transmitted by the wheelsSee also hydraulic suspension
a device or structure, usually a wire or spring, that serves to suspend or support something, such as the pendulum of a clock
chema dispersion of fine solid or liquid particles in a fluid, the particles being supported by buoyancySee also colloid
the process by which eroded particles of rock are transported in a river
musicone or more notes of a chord that are prolonged until a subsequent chord is sounded, usually to form a dissonance
A mixture in which small particles of a substance are dispersed throughout a gas or liquid. If a suspension is left undisturbed, the particles are likely to settle to the bottom. The particles in a suspension are larger than those in either a colloid or a solution. Muddy water is an example of a suspension. Compare colloidsolution.