impropriate

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IMPROPRIATE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
1. obsolete : appropriate 2. a : to take over (a benefice or ecclesiastical property) and make one's own the town which had impropriated the revenues of the ... www.merriam-webster.com
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Impropriation - Wikipedia
Impropriation, a term from English ecclesiastical law, was the destination of income from tithes of a church benefice to a layman. With the establishment of ... en.wikipedia.org
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impropriate - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Medieval Latin impropriātus, past participle of impropriāre (“to take as one's own, appropriate”), from Latin in- + proprius (“one's own”). en.wiktionary.org
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impropriate
▪ I. impropriate, v. (ɪmˈprəʊprɪeɪt) [f. ppl. stem of med. or mod.L. impropriāre: see improper v.1 and cf. appropriate v.] † 1. trans. To make proper or peculiar to some person or thing: to make one's (or some one's) own; to appropriate. Obs.1567 Drant Horace, Ep. To Rdr. *vj, To impropriate it to m... Oxford English Dictionary
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IMPROPRIATE Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.com
Impropriate definition: (tr) to transfer (property, rights, etc) from the Church into lay hands. See examples of IMPROPRIATE used in a ... www.dictionary.com
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Webster's Dictionary 1828 - Impropriate
1. To appropriate to private use; to take to one's self; as, to impropriate thanks to one's self. [Not used.] 2. To annex the possessions of the church. webstersdictionary1828.com
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empropriate
empropriate var. of impropriate. Oxford English Dictionary
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IMPROPRIATE definition in American English - Collins Dictionary
2 senses: (ɪmˈprəʊprɪˌeɪt ) 1. to transfer (property, rights, etc) from the Church into lay hands (ɪmˈprəʊprɪɪt , -ˌeɪt) 2. www.collinsdictionary.com
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impropriate, v. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English ...
The earliest known use of the verb impropriate is in the mid 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for impropriate is from before 1552, in the writing of John Leland ... www.oed.com
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IMPROPRIATE - Definition & Meaning - Reverso English Dictionary
1. ownership appropriate for private use 2. ownership take possession of for oneself, often without permission 3. church revenues Rare assign the revenues of a ... dictionary.reverso.net
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IMPROPRIETY Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.com
the quality or condition of being improper; incorrectness. inappropriateness; unsuitableness. unseemliness; indecorousness. www.dictionary.com
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Impropriate Definition & Meaning - YourDictionary
Impropriate definition: To transfer (church income or property) to private individuals or corporations. www.yourdictionary.com
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Ballinard (civil parish)
The rectory was impropriate in Edward Deane Freeman. wikipedia.org
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improprietary
† improˈprietary Obs. rare. [A modification of the earlier approprietary, conformed in the prefix to impropriate, -ator, etc.] = impropriator 1.1637 Humphrey tr. St. Ambrose Ep. ded., Your endevours..to induce some improprietaries..to an enlargement of my poore maintenance. Oxford English Dictionary
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Ingarsby
On the dissolution of Leicester Abbey, the Cave family had a large share in the plunder for the impropriate Rectory of Hungerton and the Manor of Ingarsby wikipedia.org
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