pro·rogue/prōˈrōɡ/ verbpast tense: prorogued; past participle: prorogueddiscontinue a session of (a parliament or other legislative assembly) without dissolving it.“James prorogued Parliament in 1685 and ruled without it”(of a legislative assembly) be discontinued without being dissolved.“the House was all set to prorogue”
Actually the happy birthday song is older than that movie company. A reasearcher found some info in a magazine article that may change the copyright ruling putting it in the public use.
This is exactly the problem. And if you are shopping on Thanksgiving than who are you buying for because you don’t have people you want to spend time with so why buy them gifts.
They’re having their own meeting.