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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...
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Ballinard (civil parish)
The rectory was impropriate in Edward Deane Freeman.
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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.
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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
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propriate
▪ I. † ˈpropriate, a. (n.) Obs. [ad. L. propriāt-us, pa. pple. of propri-āre to make one's own, f. propri-us proper.] 1. Appropriated, assigned to a particular person; annexed as an attribute, special, peculiar: = appropriate ppl. a. 3, 4.1654 Kirk Sess. Rec. in Campbell Balmerino (1899) 403 The Ses...
Oxford English Dictionary
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John Scudamore, 1st Viscount Scudamore
He also did work on other churches, and endowed some with impropriate tithes. Scudamore succeeded his grandfather in the family estate in 1623.
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impropriated
imˈpropriated, ppl. a. [f. prec. vb. + -ed1.] 1. Appropriated to some person or thing. ? Obs.1632 Lithgow Trav. i. 21 Italy was called so of Italus, a King in Sicily... The more impropriated names were Hesperia, because it is situate under the evening starre Hesperus: Latium..and ænotria in regard o...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Gilbert Berkeley
In 1578 he successfully resisted an attempt made by William Paulet, 3rd Marquess of Winchester to impropriate the tithes of the living of West Monkton,
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impropriator
impropriator (ɪmˈprəʊprɪeɪtə(r)) [agent-n. in L. form, from med. or mod.L. impropriāre or impropriate v.] 1. One to whom a benefice is impropriated; esp. = lay impropriator, a layman in possession of a living or its revenues.1622 T. Scott Belg. Pismire 27 The irreligious Impropriators, who prey vpon...
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St. Doologe's
Doologe's an impropriate cure. In 1837, the glebe of the parish measured , occupied by "five small houses". St.
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impropry
† imˈpropry, -rie, v. Obs. [Of the same origin as impropre, improper v.1: cf. the parallel apropre, aproprye, under appropre v.] trans. To appropriate, impropriate.1526 Pilgr. Perf. (1531) 33 The partes of mannes body hath not theyr offyce for them selfe onely impropryed, but for the common wele of ...
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Francis Dee
John's College the impropriate rectory of Pagham for the foundation of two scholars and two fellows to be chosen from Peterborough grammar school.
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Attitude toward Premarital Sex in China - Society - Chinese-Forums
What I meant was 流氓罪. Impropriate sexual relation was considered a crime. Sexual harassment was a heavy offense. That includes some pervert things, such as peeking at showering women. As I understand it, homosexual (I know some got very interested because it's a sensitive topic) was considered impropriate sexual relation too. I don't ...
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impropriation
impropriation (ɪmprəʊprɪˈeɪʃən) [n. of action from impropriate v.: see -ation.] 1. The action of impropriating; the annexation of a benefice or its revenues to a corporation, office, or individual, esp. (b) (in later use) to a lay corporation or a lay proprietor. By 17–18th c. law writers distinguis...
Oxford English Dictionary
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