DICT.TW Dictionary Taiwan
216.73.216.175
Search for:
Search type:
Return Definitions
Match headwords exactly
Match prefixes
Match prefixes (skip, count)
Match substring occurring anywhere in a headword
Match suffixes
POSIX 1003.2 (modern) regular expressions
Old (basic) regular expressions
Match using SOUNDEX algorithm
Match headwords within Levenshtein distance one
Match separate words within headwords
Match the first word within headwords
Match the last word within headwords
Database:
Any
First match
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
DICT.TW 注音查詢、中文輸入法字典
Taiwan MOE computer dictionary
Network Terminology
MDBG CC-CEDICT Chinese-English Dictionary 漢英字典
Japanese-English Electronic Dictionary 和英電子辞書
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
WordNet (r) 2.0
Elements database 20001107
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
▼
[Show options]
[
Pronunciation
] [
Help
] [
Database Info
] [
Server Info
]
1 definition found
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Se·ques·ter
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Sequestered
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Sequestering
.]
1.
Law
To
separate
from
the
owner
for
a
time
;
to
take
from
parties
in
controversy
and
put
into
the
possession
of
an
indifferent
person
;
to
seize
or
take
possession
of
,
as
property
belonging
to
another
,
and
hold
it
till
the
profits
have
paid
the
demand
for
which
it
is
taken
,
or
till
the
owner
has
performed
the
decree
of
court
,
or
clears
himself
of
contempt
;
in
international
law
,
to
confiscate
.
Formerly
the
goods
of
a
defendant
in
chancery
were
,
in
the
last
resort
,
sequestered
and
detained
to
enforce
the
decrees
of
the
court
.
And
now
the
profits
of
a
benefice
are
sequestered
to
pay
the
debts
of
ecclesiastics
.
--
Blackstone
.
2.
To
cause
(
one
)
to
submit
to
the
process
of
sequestration
;
to
deprive
(
one
)
of
one's
estate
,
property
,
etc
.
It
was
his
tailor
and
his
cook
,
his
fine
fashions
and
his
French
ragouts
,
which
sequestered
him
.
--
South
.
3.
To
set
apart
;
to
put
aside
;
to
remove
;
to
separate
from
other
things
.
I
had
wholly
sequestered
my
civil
affairss
.
--
Bacon
.
4.
To
cause
to
retire
or
withdraw
into
obscurity
;
to
seclude
;
to
withdraw
; --
often
used
reflexively
.
When
men
most
sequester
themselves
from
action
.
--
Hooker
.
A
love
and
desire
to
sequester
a
man's
self
for
a
higher
conversation
.
--
Bacon
.
DICT.TW
About DICT.TW
•
Contact Webmaster
•
Index
•
Links