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Possession Property Latin   To Expropriate Verb Expropriated  Ex·Pro·Pri·Ate

Title expropriate
Text
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary
ex·pro·pri·ate

 \\ek-ˈsprō-prē-ˌāt\\ transitive verb 
(-at·ed ; -at·ing)
 ETYMOLOGY  Medieval Latin expropriatus, past participle of expropriare, from Latin ex- + proprius own
 DATE  1611
1. to deprive of possession or proprietary rights
2. to transfer (the property of another) to one's own possession
• ex·pro·pri·a·tor 
 \\-ˌā-tər\\ noun
Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary-牛津双解-OALD7
expropriate
ex·pro·pri·ate eks5prEuprieitNAmE -5prou- / verb[VN] 
1. (formal or law 律) (of a government or an authority 政府或权力机构) to officially take away private property from its owner for public use
   征用,没收(私有财产)
2. (formal) to take sb's property and use it without permission
   侵占(他人财产)
 ex·pro·pri·ation 7eks7prEupri5eiFnNAmE -7prou- / noun [U] 
Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged
ex·pro·pri·ate
\ekˈsprōprēˌāt, ik-, usu -ād.+V\ transitive verb
(-ed/-ing/-s)
Etymology: Medieval Latin expropriatus, past participle of expropriare, from Latin ex- ex- (I) + propriare to appropriate, from proprius own — more at 
proper
1. : to deprive of possession or proprietary rights — used especially of the action of a state; see 
expropriation
2. : to take (something) out of the possession of another : transfer (the property of another) to one's own possession
 < the landowners expropriated the countryside, but they developed it — Roy Lewis & Angus Maude >
 < they have also expropriated another cherished word from the lexicon of western European peoples — R.G.Cowherd >
— used especially of the action of a state
 < promulgate laws which tended to expropriate Jewish possessions — Collier's Year Book >
 < the government had expropriated nearly 68,000 hectares of privately owned property — Americana Annual >

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