Word of the Day for Tuesday March 7, 2006
expropriate \ek-SPROH-pree-ayt\, transitive verb:
1. To deprive of possession.
2. To transfer (the property of another) to oneself.
Very few voters, after all, really believe Europe's new
generation of social democratic leaders are wild Bolsheviks
plotting to expropriate their Toyotas.
-- Fintan O'Toole, "The last gasp of social democracy,"
[1]Irish Times, March 19, 1999
The Spanish constitution declared the country "a democratic
republic of workers of all classes" and laid down that
property might be expropriated "for social uses."
-- Mark Mazower, [2]Dark Continent
Farmlands that had belonged to Bosnia's Muslim beys...
and agas were expropriated without compensation and handed
over to their former tenant sharecroppers.
-- Chuck Sudetic, [3]Blood and Vengeance
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Expropriate comes from Medieval Latin expropriatus, past
participle of expropriare, "to deprive of property," from
Latin ex- + proprius, "one's own." The act of expropriating is
expropriation. One who expropriates is an expropriator.
References
1. http://www.ireland.com/
2. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/067975704X/ref=nosim/lexico
3. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0140286810/ref=nosim/lexico
Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation
http://dictionary.reference.com/search?r=9&q=expropriate
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