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gridlock

   Also found in: Financial, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
grid·lock  (grdlk)
n.
1. A traffic jam in which no vehicular movement is possible, especially one caused by the blockage of key intersections within a grid of streets.
2. A complete lack of movement or progress resulting in a backup or stagnation: "the political gridlock that prevented ... the President and Congress from moving expeditiously to cut the budget" (Robert D. Hormats).

gridlock v.
gridlocked adj.

gridlock [ˈgrɪdˌlɒk] Chiefly US
n
1. (Engineering / Automotive Engineering) obstruction of urban traffic caused by queues of vehicles forming across junctions and causing further queues to form in the intersecting streets
2. a point in a dispute at which no agreement can be reached; deadlock political gridlock
vb
(Engineering / Automotive Engineering) (tr) (of traffic) to block or obstruct (an area)
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.gridlockgridlock - a traffic jam so bad that no movement is possible
snarl-up, traffic jam - a number of vehicles blocking one another until they can scarcely move

gridlock
noun
1. traffic jam The streets are wedged solid with the traffic gridlock.
2. deadlock, halt, stalemate, impasse, standstill, full stop He agreed that these policies will lead to a gridlock in the future.
Translations
gridlock [ˈgrɪdlɒk] N
1. (Aut) → embotellamiento m
2. (fig) → punto m muerto
gridlock [ˈgrɪdlɒk] n
(= traffic jam) → embouteillage m
to create gridlock → provoquer un embouteillage
(= impasse)
the political gridlock that currently exists → le blocage politique actuel
gridlock
n (Mot) → totaler Stau, Verkehrsinfarkt m; (fig)festgefahrene Situation; total gridlock (Mot) → Verkehrskollaps m
gridlock [ˈgrɪdˌlɒk] n (traffic jam) → paralisi f inv del traffico
gridlock [ˈgrɪdˌlɒk] n (traffic jam) → paralisi f inv del traffico


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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
In Los Angeles and in cities across America, soaring fuel costs and worsening gridlock are like a one-two punch hitting drivers, pinching our wallets and costing us valuable time lost in Waffle.
The new store is expected to create 500 to 600 permanent jobs in Red Hook, but some community activists were dead set against it, citing the possibility of traffic gridlock and damage to landmark structures in the historic neighborhood.
Traffic safety experts say they can control gridlock outside schools, where hordes of parents and buses drop off youngsters, by educating drivers about road safety, designing schools with better traffic patterns and enforcing speed limits and parking laws.
 
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