Suffering Brexhaustion? Here’s a handy guide to UK Brexit-speak
- From backstop to Brexiteer, Britain’s decision to leave the European Union has spawned a baffling array of new terms

ARTICLE 50: Article 50 of the European Union’s Lisbon Treaty sets out the procedure for a country wishing to leave the bloc and imposes a two-year countdown to that country’s departure.
Britain triggered the process on March 29, 2017, and was due to leave on March 29, 2019.
Amid deadlock in Britain’s Parliament the EU agreed a Brextension until April 12 and then until October 31.
BACKSTOP: The Brexit backstop is part of the withdrawal agreement between the EU and Britain. It’s an insurance policy designed to ensure there are no customs checks or other border infrastructure between the UK’s Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland after Brexit.
The backstop says if no other solution is found, Britain will remain in a customs union with the EU to keep the Irish border open. Opposition to the backstop from pro-Brexit British lawmakers is the main reason the deal has been defeated in Parliament
BREXHAUSTION: The state of anxious weariness felt by many UK citizens and politicians at the unresolved Brexit crisis, almost three years after Britain voted to leave the EU.