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confiscation
[ kon-fuh-skey-shuhn ]
noun
- the act, as a penalty, of seizing or appropriating something for public use or for ownership by the state:
The government introduced a bill allowing the confiscation of property belonging to foreign states.
- the act of seizing something by or as if by authority:
In order to avoid confiscation of their cell phones under the strict new rule, many teens only became more secretive about using them.
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ²Ô´Ç²Ô·³¦´Ç²Ô·´Ú¾±²õ·³¦²¹Â·³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô noun
- ±è°ù´Ç·³¦´Ç²Ô·´Ú¾±²õ·³¦²¹Â·³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô noun
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of confiscation1
Example Sentences
Thames Valley Police said it obtained a confiscation order for a "nominal sum" of £1, which allowed a "parallel financial investigation" to be carried out.
Ms MacVicar feared that if a criminal confiscation order was granted, the remainder of the cash owed would have gone to the Treasury.
At least one student rebelled, leading to the confiscation of a phone during physical education, reported an 8th-grader at Walter Reed, who asked not to be named.
The settlement also came with an apology from the government for the confiscation of Mt Taranaki and more than a million acres of land from local MÄori in the 1860s.
At a hearing in November, Hughes contested a property he had built on land belonging to his parents in Ireland was not an available asset for confiscation proceedings.
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