An assigned period of time for an elected official is called a term.
Yes, That would be a good name for it.
The outgoing official is called a lame duck. The period of time this official is still in office is called the lame duck period.
The period of which an elected official is in office after losing an election but before the new office holder is sworn in.
During the period of the Roman Republic there were five types of executive officers of state who were elected: the consuls, praetors, censors, aediles and quaestors.
The lame duck period is the period of time in which an elected official is coming to the end of their term and a new candidate has been elected to the position. With the impending end of their term coming up, some officials become fairly ineffective during this time.
During the period between when an elected official is voted out of office and the end of his/her term, the official is referred to as a lame duck.
The two-year period between congressional elections is known as a term. This is the period which the elected officials will hold office.
Are you sure you mean switchport? IPs aren't assigned to a switchport. They can be assigned to switches. When an IP is assigned to a switch, it's permanent. They are also assigned to computers, usually by a DHCP server, which has a lease period, but that can be set to many different lengths.
Senators in the US are elected for a period of six years. They can be re-elected.
A party that has at least 12 elected members in the House of Commons. Such a party is entitled to question the government during Question Period and has a research budget. Otherwise, members of a party that has no official status are considered as independent Members of Parliament.
1750-1800
The incumbent is still the president, and the new one is the president elect.
A lame duck is an elected official whose tenure is about to end. The 20th Amendment shortened the lame duck period by moving the beginning of the new Congress to January 3 and the presidential inauguration to January 20.