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This is the travel of dismay – dismay means being divested of power or ability.
Deprivation refers to being divested of individual rights and possessions that are afforded to otherwise "free" individuals (Sykes 1958).
Rep. Chris Sprowls, R-Clearwater, said Lofgren and condo owners across Florida are being "divested" of their own homes.
"We have a government who has been deeply ineffectual in dealing with this, people are being divested of their interest in real property by rapacious loan servicers and collection companies".
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The transcendent God, who is beyond all being, all rationality, and all conceptuality, is divested of divine transcendence.
They're divested of all of their meaning.
Its patriarch was executed, and the church was divested of its extensive landholdings.
Watson wants to do the same; he wants Murdoch to be divested of his company.
As he was being taken to an operating room, Sharon was divested of his authority as Prime Minister.
In the past, war chiefs were selected only in times of crisis and were divested of their powers thereafter.
Had Stephen Joyce not lately been divested of his powers of obstruction, none of these events would have stood a chance.
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