Senators.
In the Senate (or Seanad as it is also known)
In Australia and the US they are known as Senators, in the UK they are known as Lords.
Every two years, in every even-numbered year, about one third of all Senate seats, representing about two thirds of all of the states, come up for election. No one state elects both of their U.S. Senators in the same years, except in some cases when a special election is required to fill a vacancy. Senators whose seats come up for election in 2014 are known as Class 2 Senators, Senators whose seats come up for election in 2016 are known as Class 3 Senators, and Senators whose seats come up for election in 2018 are known as Class 1 Senators.
from 61-71 they were known as the Washington senators
There are 40 members. As of Jan. 2008, the senate was split 21/19 in favor of the Democratic party.
they were opposed to the treaty as it was written and wanted changes
The plural possessive form of "senators" is "senators'."
Yes, that is true of U. S. Senators and U. S. Representatives. State Senators have districts from which the are elected. Of course, for states that have one U. S. Representative, the whole state is their district. They are known as At Large Representatives.
The possessive form of the noun "senators" is "senators'".
None. the senate is a body of legislators, known as senators. they serve with no term limits.
The possessive form of the plural noun senators is senators'.Example: A copy of the report has been delivered to all of the senators' offices.