1 an extra competition or election to decide the winner, because the leading competitors have finished equal:
In a run-off for the presidency of the assembly, Santos beat Gutiérrez.
2 an extra election to decide on a winner, because the leading competitors have equal numbers of votes, or because the winner had less than half the number of votes:
The plants were sprayed until run-off (approximately 100 ml per plant) and then left to dry for 60 min before being placed in a cage.
Adopting the run-off approach rather than the going-concern approach means different effects are produced by some types of risks.
The first tier consists of 176 seats, which are filled by the winners of run-off elections in single-member districts.
The distinction is not innocuous because the effects of majority run-off systems on electoral competition are quite different from those of plurality rule.
The up-estuary, tidally averaged salinity increases with increasing tidal range and decreasing run-off.
To reduce nitrates in rivers would require reductions in the use of fertilisers, or more specifically in fertiliser run-off, and changes in cropping techniques.
The access cover for the terrace tank was rusted, improperly secured and sunken below ground level, allowing surface run-off water to enter the tank.
Surface detritus is derived by erosion of the bedrock, and ice deposits contain sandy-silty detritus incorporated from the wind and surface run-off.
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