Someone vs Disappropriate - What's the difference?
someone | disappropriate |
A partially specified but unnamed person.
To remove something that has been allocated to someone; often to reassign it elsewhere.
(legal) Severed from the appropriation or possession of a spiritual corporation.
* Blackstone
As a pronoun someone
is some person.As a noun someone
is a partially specified but unnamed person.As a verb disappropriate is
to remove something that has been allocated to someone; often to reassign it elsewhere.As an adjective disappropriate is
severed from the appropriation or possession of a spiritual corporation.someone
English
Usage notes
* Logically related to anyone, everyone, and no one. Becomes no one via negation. *: Did anyone help with the clean-up effort? *: Yes, someone''' helped yesterday, but '''no one''' did today because '''everyone was too busy.Synonyms
* anybody, anyone, somebodyAbbreviations
Some translation dictionaries have used the abbreviation or so for someone.Noun
(en noun)- Do you need a gift for that special someone ?
- The someones under discussion were eventually arrested.
disappropriate
English
Verb
(disappropriat)Adjective
(-)- The appropriation may be severed, and the church become disappropriate , two ways.