verb (used with object), ex·pro·pri·at·ed, ex·pro·pri·at·ing. 1.to take
possession of, especially for public use by the right of eminent domain, thus divesting the title of the private owner:
The government expropriated the land for a recreation area. 2.to dispossess (a person) of ownership: The revolutionary government expropriated the landowners from their estates.
3.to take (something) from another's possession for one's own use: He expropriated my ideas for his own article.
Origin: 1605–15; <
Medieval Latin expropriātus separated from one's own (past participle of
expropriāre), equivalent to
ex- ex-1 +
propri(
āre) to appropriate (derivative of
proprius proper) +
-ātus -ate1 Related forms ex·pro·pri·a·tion, noun
ex·pro·pri·a·tion·ist, adjective, noun
ex·pro·pri·a·tor, noun
de-ex·pro·pri·a·tion, noun
un·ex·pro·pri·a·ble, adjective
un·ex·pro·pri·at·ed, adjective
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Un expropriable
is always a great word to know.
So is callithumpian. Does it mean:
So is doohickey. Does it mean:
So is lollapalooza. Does it mean: