-
61 confiscate
-
62 confiscate
-
63 confiscate
['kɒnfɪskeɪt]vконфіскува́ти, реквізува́ти -
64 confiscate
конфисковать -
65 confiscate
['konfiskeit](to seize or take (something) away, usually as a penalty: The teacher confiscated the boy's comic which he was reading in class.) κατάσχω -
66 confiscate
vконфисковать; реквизировать; изымать; арестовыватьEnglish-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > confiscate
-
67 confiscate
конфисковать; реквизировать; арестовывать -
68 confiscate
adj.confiscado, entregado al fisco.vt.confiscar. (pt & pp confiscated) -
69 confiscate
забиратьзабратьконфисковатьконфисковыватьреквизироватьубиратьубрать -
70 confiscate
1. a конфискованный; реквизированный2. a лишённый имущества3. v конфисковать, реквизироватьСинонимический ряд:appropriate (verb) accroach; annex; appropriate; arrogate; assume; commandeer; expropriate; grab; impound; preempt; seize; sequester; snatch; steal; take; take away; usurpАнтонимический ряд: -
71 confiscate
['konfiskeit](to seize or take (something) away, usually as a penalty: The teacher confiscated the boy's comic which he was reading in class.) confisquer -
72 confiscate
['konfiskeit](to seize or take (something) away, usually as a penalty: The teacher confiscated the boy's comic which he was reading in class.) confiscar -
73 CONFISCATE
[V]CONFISCO (-ARE -AVI -ATUM)PUBLICO (-ARE -AVI -ATUM)PROSCRIBO (-ERE -SCRIPSI -SCRIPTUM) -
74 confiscate
[ˈkɔnfɪskeit]müsadirə etmək; confiscation müsadirə -
75 confiscate
பறிமுதல் செய் -
76 confiscate
konfiská -
77 confiscate
(v) норгомс [nоrgоms] -
78 confiscate
v gbà gbà fún ìjôba lônà ìjçníyàbolé -
79 Confiscate
v. trans.P. δημεύειν, δημοσιοῦν, δημοσιεύειν (Xen.).Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Confiscate
-
80 confiscate
v. tr.कुर्क करना, राज्याधीन कर लेना, जब्त करना, ले लेना
См. также в других словарях:
confiscate — con·fis·cate / kän fə ˌskāt/ vt cat·ed, cat·ing: to seize without compensation as forfeited to the public treasury compare criminal forfeiture ◇ Illegal items such as narcotics or firearms, or profits from the sale of illegal items, may be… … Law dictionary
confiscate — con‧fis‧cate [ˈkɒnfskeɪt ǁ ˈkɑːn ] verb [transitive] LAW to officially take private property away from someone, for example because a crime has been committed: • The state can confiscate criminals profits from books or movies describing their… … Financial and business terms
Confiscate — Con fis*cate (? or ?), a. [L. confiscatus, p. p. of confiscare to confiscate, prop., to lay up in a chest; con + fiscus basket, purse, treasury. See {Fiscal}.] Seized and appropriated by the government to the public use; forfeited. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Confiscate — Con fis*cate (? or ?; 277), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Confiscated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Confiscating}.] To seize as forfeited to the public treasury; to appropriate to the public use. [1913 Webster] It was judged that he should be banished and his whole… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
confiscate — 1550s, originally, to appropriate for the treasury, from L. confiscatus, pp. of confiscare, from com together (see COM (Cf. com )) + fiscus public treasury, lit. money basket. Related: Confiscated; confiscating … Etymology dictionary
confiscate — appropriate, *arrogate, usurp, preempt Analogous words: seize, *take, grab: condemn, proscribe (see SENTENCE vb) … New Dictionary of Synonyms
confiscate — [v] steal; seize accroach, annex, appropriate, arrogate, assume, commandeer, confisticate, expropriate, glom on to*, grab, hijack, impound, liberate, moonlight requisition*, possess oneself of, preempt, sequester, sequestrate, swipe, take, take… … New thesaurus
confiscate — ► VERB 1) take or seize (property) with authority. 2) appropriate to the public treasury as a penalty. DERIVATIVES confiscation noun confiscatory adjective. ORIGIN Latin confiscare put away in a chest, consign to the public treasury , from fiscus … English terms dictionary
confiscate — [kän′fis kāt΄] vt. confiscated, confiscating [< L confiscatus, pp. of confiscare, to lay up in a chest < com , together + fiscus, money basket, public treasury: see FISCAL] 1. to seize (private property) for the public treasury, usually as… … English World dictionary
confiscate — v. (D; tr.) to confiscate from * * * [ kɒnfɪskeɪt] (D; tr.) to confiscate from … Combinatory dictionary
confiscate — [16] Confiscate’s etymological connotations are financial: the Latin verb confīscāre meant ‘appropriate to the public treasury’. It was formed from the collective prefix com and fiscus. This meant originally ‘rush basket’; it was applied to the… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins