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Answer for the clue "Parliamentary fixture breaks Cook's Law ", 8 letters:
woolsack

Alternative clues for the word woolsack

Word definitions for woolsack in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Woolsack \Wool"sack`\, n. A sack or bag of wool; specifically, the seat of the lord chancellor of England in the House of Lords, being a large, square sack of wool resembling a divan in form.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
The Woolsack is the seat of the Lord Speaker in the House of Lords , the Upper House of the Parliament of the United Kingdom . In the 14th century King Edward III (1327–1377) commanded that his Lord Chancellor whilst in council should sit on a wool bale ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A wool bale or cushion, the traditional seat of the (w: Lord Speaker) in the British House of Lords.

Usage examples of woolsack.

Sir Gregory Grogram, who was a rich, energetic man, determined to have a peerage, and convinced that, should the Coalition fall to pieces, the Liberal element would be in the ascendant,--so that the woolsack would then be opened to him,--declined to occupy the place.

With Grey it was a dukedom, with Wade the woolsack, with Buyse the plunder of Cheapside.

Do you not see a woolsack in store for you as you look upon these brave fellows?

Her grace would have you eat no more Woolsack pies, Nor Dagger frumety.

When the woolsack has been reached there comes an end of doubt, and a beginning of ease.

It had been materially altered in the other House under the auspices of his noble friend on the woolsack, but from those alterations he was obliged to dissent.

Old Saturn of the Woolsack sits there mute, we will say, a relic of other days, as seated in this divan.

On entering the House, he is described to have appeared abashed and pale: he passed the woolsack without looking round, and advanced to the table where the proper officer was attending to administer the oaths.

At the moment the betting was evens whether Macdermott would die of high blood-pressure before he was sixty or grace the Woolsack when he was seventy.

Macdermott would die of high blood-pressure before he was sixty or grace the Woolsack when he was seventy.

The marchers are coming up Woolsack Road in a thick snake, ten, twenty abreast, then turning north on to the motorway.

On the 6th of June a message was read from the woolsack, communicating certain papers relative to the conduct of her majesty since her departure from England, which the king recommended to the immediate and serious attention of their lordships.

We could not avoid contrasting the intellectual features of the old ex-chancellor with the contracted expression of the occupant of the woolsack, and wondering what the latter would be like at the age of eighty-four, to which Lord Lyndhurst had arrived.

I could see by the strings and woolsacks on the floor that she had had it unwrapped.

The presence chamber was about forty feet square, showy and handsome: round the walls were placed sofas, which, from being covered with scarlet, reminded me of the woolsacks in the House of Lords.