Expropriate vs Sequester - What's the difference?
expropriate | sequester |
To separate from all external influence; to seclude; to withdraw.
* Hooker
To separate in order to store.
To set apart; to put aside; to remove; to separate from other things.
* Francis Bacon
(chemistry) To prevent an ion in solution from behaving normally by forming a coordination compound
(legal) To temporarily remove (property) from the possession of its owner and hold it as security against legal claims.
To cause (one) to submit to the process of sequestration; to deprive (one) of one's estate, property, etc.
* South
(transitive, US, politics, legal) To remove (certain funds) automatically from a budget.
To seize and hold enemy property.
To withdraw; to retire.
* Milton
To renounce (as a widow may) any concern with the estate of her husband.
sequestration; separation
(legal) A person with whom two or more contending parties deposit the subject matter of the controversy; one who mediates between two parties; a referee.
(medicine) A sequestrum.
(Webster 1913)
As verbs the difference between expropriate and sequester
is that expropriate is to deprive a person of their private property for public use while sequester is to separate from all external influence; to seclude; to withdraw.As a noun sequester is
sequestration; separation.sequester
English
Verb
(en verb)- The jury was sequestered from the press by the judge's order.
- when men most sequester themselves from action
- The coal burning plant was ordered to sequester its CO2 emissions.
- I had wholly sequestered my civil affairss.
- It was his tailor and his cook, his fine fashions and his French ragouts, which sequestered him.
- The Budget Control Act of 2011 sequestered 1.2 trillion dollars over 10 years on January 2, 2013.
- to sequester out of the world into Atlantic and Utopian politics
Synonyms
* segregateNoun
(en noun)- (Bouvier)