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dispossess
[ dis-puh-zes ]
verb (used with object)
- to put (a person) out of possession, especially of real property; oust.
- to banish.
- to abandon ownership of (a building), especially as a bad investment:
Landlords have dispossessed many old tenement buildings.
dispossess
/ ˌɪəˈɛ /
verb
- tr to take away possession of something, esp property; expel
Derived Forms
- ˌ徱Dzˈǰ, adjective
- ˌ徱DzˈDz, noun
- ˌ徱Dzˈǰ, noun
Other Word Forms
- 徱pDz·sDz noun
- 徱pDz·sǰ noun
- 徱·Dz··· [dis-p, uh, -, zes, -, uh, -ree], adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of dispossess1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
He posted on X: "The Holy Father dedicated his life to serving the poor and dispossessed. "
"It's such a clear example of how colonialism benefits from dispossessing indigenous people of their land and writing us out of history."
In the golden age of mobility, the winners were the dispossessed.
Now that fires from Pacific Palisades to Altadena to Castaic have finally subsided, thousands upon thousands of residents are returning to a life dispossessed of its least common denominators.
At the heart of Trump’s Middle East policy is a delusion that was shared by President Biden and fueled by Netanyahu: Israel can get the benefits of peace while still occupying and dispossessing Palestinians.
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