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Dictionary
To confiscation
noun
The act or process of confiscating.
synonyms
Exact(26)
Unauthorized possession will lead to confiscation of the goods.
Possession of camera cell-phones will lead to confiscation by the authorities.
That was tabled, however, amid objections that it amounted to confiscation of property.
Seditious publications are already subject to confiscation, though the longstanding rule has not been used recently.
"This move... would essentially amount to confiscation of our brand in Australia".
But lawmakers chose not to push back against the gun lobby's false claim that registration leads to confiscation.
Similar(34)
In order to prevent further international tensions, they decided to generalize confiscation to all Eastern Orthodox Church estates, Greek as well as those of the incipient Romanian Orthodox monasteries.
Foreign traders often were subject to confiscations and other types of harassment if one of their countrymen had defaulted in a business transaction.
As the treasury lost more of its revenues to the depredations of the devşirme, it began to meet its obligations by debasing the coinage, sharply increasing taxes, and resorting to confiscations, all of which only worsened the situation.
In fact, Lincoln did not prohibit the general from freeing slaves in Missouri; he merely told Frémont to rewrite his order to conform to the Confiscation Act.
Unless it were to resort to mass confiscation à la Mugabe, it has virtually no hope of doubling black ownership of the land to 30% by 2015, as it promises.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com