No, British Parliament is bicameral. The House of Commons (lower chamber) has primacy when it comes to legislation, but the House of Lords (upper chamber) has a role in the legislative process through amendments and, in some circumstances, initiating legislation.
No; the United Kingdom's national Parliament is a bicameral legislature because it is comprised of two chambers: the House of Commons and the House of Lords. A unicameral legislature has only a single chamber, which may be the same thing as the legislature itself (as in the case of the Scottish Parliament, the Welsh Assembly and the Northern Irish Assembly in the UK) or a distinct entity (as in the case of the New Zealand House of Representatives).
It is bicameral. It house two houses, known as the house of commons and hte house of lords.
The UK uses a bicameral system, where the House of Lords (upper chamber) and House of Commons (lower chamber) form the legislature.
Bicameral Parliamentary (:
A constitutional monarchy with bicameral parliament, similar to that of the UK.
It means to have government that allows more freedom
They have a Republican form of government headed by a Governor, a bicameral Legislature and an independent Judiciary.
a strong central government and a bicameral legislature.
Many countries have bicameral legislatures, including the UK and the USA.
Bicameral.
Maryland is a Republic with a Democratic government that includes a bicameral legislative branch, a multi level judicial system an a strong executive branch.
Bicameral
A bicameral legislature is a government that consists of two chambers or houses in the legislative branch (such as the senate and house of representatives in U.S. government)
A bicameral parliamentary democracy is a system of government with two houses of parliament where the lower house is elected by the people and the upper house may be elected or appointed. The executive branch is led by a Prime Minister elected from the parliament and is accountable to the legislature. Examples include countries like the United Kingdom, Australia, and India.
It is just like the US government system, minus the electoral college: both are federal republics, with a president and a bicameral congress.