Plurality
Plurality is a term used in voting theory to describe a method in which the winner is the candidate who receives more votes than any other candidate, but not necessarily a majority of all votes. This contrasts with a majority requirement, where a candidate must win more than 50 percent. Plurality voting is commonly associated with first-past-the-post systems used in single-member districts, where each voter selects one candidate and the candidate with the largest share of votes wins.
In multi-candidate races, a candidate can win with only a plurality of the vote if no candidate
To address these issues, some jurisdictions use runoff elections, where top candidates face a second round
In linguistics, plurality refers to grammatical number indicating more than one entity, as in the distinction