Þingræðisríki
Þingræðisríki is a form of government in which the legislative branch holds the principal political power and the executive is dependent on its support. In practice, a cabinet is drawn from the parliament and a prime minister or equivalent is the head of government, while the head of state is often ceremonial.
Etymology: the term is formed from þing (parliament) and ræði (rule) and ríki (state). It denotes rule
Core features: governments must retain the confidence of the parliament; regular elections and vote of no confidence
Variants and relationships: many countries with parliamentary regimes have constitutional monarchies or parliamentary republics. Compared with
Examples: the United Kingdom, Sweden, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Norway operate parliamentary regimes; Germany and
See also: parliamentary democracy; constitutional monarchy; responsible government; vote of confidence.