adjourn
verb /əˈdʒɜːn/
  /əˈdʒɜːrn/
 [intransitive, transitive, often passive] (formal)Verb Forms
 Phrasal Verbs| present simple I / you / we / they adjourn |  /əˈdʒɜːn/  /əˈdʒɜːrn/ | 
| he / she / it adjourns |  /əˈdʒɜːnz/  /əˈdʒɜːrnz/ | 
| past simple adjourned |  /əˈdʒɜːnd/  /əˈdʒɜːrnd/ | 
| past participle adjourned |  /əˈdʒɜːnd/  /əˈdʒɜːrnd/ | 
| -ing form adjourning |  /əˈdʒɜːnɪŋ/  /əˈdʒɜːrnɪŋ/ | 
- to stop a meeting or an official process, especially a trial, for a period of time- The court adjourned for lunch.
- adjourn something The trial has been adjourned until next week.
- The chairman may adjourn the meeting at any time.
 Extra ExamplesTopics Working lifec2- Magistrates adjourned the hearing until May 14.
- Mr Justice Latham adjourned sentence until Friday week.
- The case was adjourned for a week.
- The court will normally adjourn to allow the collection of further evidence.
- The inquest was adjourned pending further investigations.
- The trial was adjourned indefinitely.
 Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- indefinitely
- sine die
 - for
- pending
- to
- …
 Word OriginMiddle English (in the sense ‘summon someone to appear on a particular day’): from Old French ajorner, from the phrase a jorn (nome) ‘to an (appointed) day’.