-
1 dispossess
dispə'zes(to take (property) away from: He was dispossessed of all his lands.) despojar, desposeertr[dɪspə'zes]1 desposeer, despojar1 los desposeídos nombre masculino pluralv.• birlar v.• desahuciar v.• desapoderar v.• desaposentar v.• desaposesionar v.• despojar v.• desposeer v.• lanzar v.• privar v.• sacar v.'dɪspə'zestransitive verb (frml)to dispossess somebody OF something — desposeer* or despojar a alguien de algo (frml)
['dɪspǝ'zes]VT [+ tenant] desahuciarto dispossess sb of — desposeer or despojar a algn de
* * *['dɪspə'zes]transitive verb (frml)to dispossess somebody OF something — desposeer* or despojar a alguien de algo (frml)
-
2 dispossess
3ps.tercera persona del presente singular del verbo: DISPOSSES.vt.desposeer ( of de) (pt & pp dispossessed) -
3 dispossess proceeding
s.acción de despojo, acción confesoria. -
4 despojar
despojar ( conjugate despojar) verbo transitivo (frml) despojar a algn de algo ‹de privilegios/poderes› to divest sb of sth (frml); ‹de título/posesiones› to dispossess (frml) o strip sb of sth despojarse verbo pronominal (frml o liter) despojarse de algo ‹ de ropa› to remove sth; ‹ de bienes› to relinquish sth
despojar verbo transitivo to strip [de, of]: le despojaron de todo cuanto tenía, they stripped him of everything he had ' despojar' also found in these entries: Spanish: despojo - privar English: dispossess - divest -
5 dispossessed
adj.desposeído.pp.participio pasado del verbo DISPOSSESS.pt.pretérito del verbo DISPOSSESS. -
6 despojo
Del verbo despojar: ( conjugate despojar) \ \
despojo es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
despojó es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: despojar despojo
despojar ( conjugate despojar) verbo transitivo (frml) despojo a algn de algo ‹de privilegios/poderes› to divest sb of sth (frml); ‹de título/posesiones› to dispossess (frml) o strip sb of sth despojarse verbo pronominal (frml o liter) despojose de algo ‹ de ropa› to remove sth; ‹ de bienes› to relinquish sth
despojar verbo transitivo to strip [de, of]: le despojaron de todo cuanto tenía, they stripped him of everything he had
despojo sustantivo masculino
1 (resultado de despojar) plundering: los bandidos procedieron al despojo de la hacienda, the robbers started to plunder the ranch
2 pl (restos, cadáver) remains: los buitres se comieron los despojos, the vultures ate the remains
См. также в других словарях:
dispossess — dis·pos·sess /ˌdis pə zes/ vt: to put out of possession or occupancy compare evict dis·pos·ses·sion / ze shən/ n dis·pos·ses·sor / ze sər/ n Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law … Law dictionary
Dispossess — Dis pos*sess (?; see {Possess}), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Dispossessed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Dispossessing}.] [Pref. dis + possess: cf. F. d[ e]poss[ e]der.] To put out of possession; to deprive of the actual occupancy of, particularly of land or real… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
dispossess — late 15c., from O.Fr. despossesser to dispossess, from des (see DIS (Cf. dis )) + possesser (see POSSESS (Cf. possess)). Related: Dispossessed; dispossessing … Etymology dictionary
dispossess of — index abridge (divest) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
dispossess — dis‧pos‧sess [ˌdɪspəˈzes] verb [transitive] to take property or land away from someone, often illegally: • black South Africans who had been dispossessed of their homes dispossession noun [uncountable] … Financial and business terms
dispossess — [v] deprive appropriate, eject, evict, expel, expropriate, oust, put out, throw into the street*; concepts 121,142 … New thesaurus
dispossess — ► VERB 1) deprive of land or property. 2) (in sport) deprive (a player) of the ball. DERIVATIVES dispossession noun … English terms dictionary
dispossess — [dis΄pə zes′] vt. to deprive of the possession of something, esp. land, a house, etc.; oust dispossession [dis΄pəzesh′ən] n. dispossessor n … English World dictionary
dispossess — v. (D; tr.) to dispossess of (they were dispossessed of their wealth) * * * [ˌdɪspə zes] (D; tr.) to dispossess of (they were dispossessed of their wealth) … Combinatory dictionary
dispossess — UK [ˌdɪspəˈzes] / US verb [transitive] Word forms dispossess : present tense I/you/we/they dispossess he/she/it dispossesses present participle dispossessing past tense dispossessed past participle dispossessed formal to take something valuable… … English dictionary
dispossess — v. a. 1. Deprive, divest, strip. 2. Dislodge, eject, oust, drive out. 3. (Law.) Disseize, oust, wrongfully dispossess … New dictionary of synonyms