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majorité

Majorité is a term used in law and politics to denote two related concepts: the numerical majority in a vote and the age at which a person is legally considered an adult. In many French-speaking and international contexts, the word covers both ideas, though in English-language discussions the terms majority and age of majority are used to distinguish the voting threshold from the legal status of adulthood.

In voting and decision-making, a majority refers to the option that obtains more votes than any other

Age of majority, the other core sense of majorité, is the age at which a person is

The concept interacts with civil status, voting rights, and contractual capacity, and is distinguished from the

option
or
than
a
specified
threshold.
Different
forms
of
majority
exist.
A
simple
majority
requires
more
votes
for
an
option
than
for
all
other
options,
typically
more
than
half
of
valid
votes
cast.
An
absolute
majority
requires
more
than
half
of
all
possible
votes,
including
those
not
cast
or
abstentions.
Some
decisions
require
a
qualified
or
supermajority,
such
as
two-thirds
or
three-fifths,
to
reflect
greater
consensus.
In
parliamentary
practice,
rules
may
specify
“majority
of
those
present
and
voting”
or
“majority
of
all
members,”
which
can
change
the
outcome
depending
on
turnout.
legally
recognized
as
an
adult
with
full
civil
rights
and
responsibilities.
This
age
varies
by
country
and
sometimes
by
jurisdiction
within
a
country.
Commonly
it
is
18,
but
it
can
be
21
in
some
places,
or
differ
for
specific
rights
such
as
voting,
drinking,
or
contracting.
Reaching
the
age
of
majority
grants
capacities
like
entering
contracts,
marrying
without
parental
consent,
and
bearing
full
legal
liability,
though
some
activities
may
carry
additional
age-based
rules
or
exceptions.
status
of
minority.