ab·sten·tion /əb-'sten-chən/ n: the staying of the exercise of federal jurisdiction in a case that involves a question of state law or policy which the federal court prefers to have resolved by a state court or agency
Bur·ford abstention /'bər-fərd-/: an abstention grounded on the involvement in the federal case of a challenge to the exercise of a usu. complex state administrative function
Col·o·ra·do Riv·er abstention /ˌkä-lə-'ra-dō-, -'rä-/: an abstention grounded esp. on the involvement in the federal case of questions of state concern that are also at issue in a parallel case in state court
Pull·man abstention /'pu̇l-mən-/: an abstention grounded on the involvement in the federal case of the interpretation of an ambiguously worded state law whose constitutionality would have to be determined by the federal court
◇ A party to a case subjected to a Pullman abstention may reserve the right to return to federal court once the state court has resolved the state law question. Pullman abstentions are the most common type of abstention.
Thi·bo·daux abstention /ˌtē-bə-'dō-/: an abstention grounded on the involvement in the federal case of an issue that greatly affects and concerns a state
Youn·ger abstention /'yəŋ-gər-/: an abstention grounded on the plaintiff's invocation of federal jurisdiction for the purpose of restraining an ongoing usu. criminal state proceeding that has been brought in good faith and not for harassment
Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam-Webster. 1996.