Dictionary
To impound
verb
To shut up or place in an enclosure called a pound.
Exact(60)
The government then planned to impound the sculpture this week for return to Cambodia.
Also, police officers were given new powers to impound vehicles used to transport illegal immigrants.
The army permitted the government to impound the plane only after several days.
By 2011, the BLM told Cliven that it intended to impound his cows.
No attempt was made to impound it or to take action against its publisher.
It said it acted after learning that other creditors might try to impound the vessels.
Mr. Van Nostrand said there had been no formal request to impound the machines.
While Congress complained, it did not challenge the president's right to impound.
Fines for trespassing should be increased, and the authorities should be allowed to impound vehicles.
He has employed what he considers an executive right to "impound" money appropriated by Congress for various specific measures.
Sony was also seeking to impound his "circumvention devices," and it wanted him to take all the instructions offline immediately.
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