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The House of Representatives has much stricter rules than the Senate (mostly because the House has so many more members that without strict rules, it would be almost impossible to accomplish anything).
The rules committee sets a time limit for debating a bill. They do most things involving bills.
The time when the post arrives through the letterbox, and the force of gravity, determines when the bills land on the floor of the house.
It desides what bills will be considered by the full house.
rules committee
House rules committee is responsible for coming up with a schedule on how to present bills to the house for debate. The rules committee normally meets ever Wednesday.
Traditional synagogues have strict rules on how "services" are run, what verses from the Torah are read, and the strict non-mixing of the genders. However, reform synagogues are less strict on these rules.
* you sit down and talk never stand
= The Rules Committee can give priority to the bills that are most important. It can also kill a bill by not letting it get to the floor. In the House, the Rules Committee sets the terms for debate. It usually puts time limits on the discussion, for example, to speed up action. =
Monks followed strict rules because the rules were intended to help them live as good Christians.
Before most bills can reach the floor of the House, they must clear the Rules Committee. Also, the committee decides whether and under what conditions the full House will consider a measure.
Before most bills can reach the floor of the House, they must clear the Rules Committee. Also, the committee decides whether and under what conditions the full House will consider a measure.