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- ARROGATE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of ARROGATE is to claim or seize without justification How to use arrogate in a sentence Did you know?
- Arrogate - Wikipedia
Arrogate (April 11, 2013 – June 2, 2020) was a Thoroughbred racehorse, and was the richest horse in equine history (by earnings) He won the 2016 Travers Stakes in a record time in his first stakes appearance He won the Breeders' Cup Classic and was named the American Champion Three-Year-Old Male Horse and World's Best Racehorse of 2016
- ARROGATE Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
Arrogate definition: to claim unwarrantably or presumptuously; assume or appropriate to oneself without right See examples of ARROGATE used in a sentence
- ARROGATE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
ARROGATE definition: 1 to take something without having the right to do so: 2 to take something without having the… Learn more
- ARROGATE definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
If someone arrogates to themselves something such as a responsibility or privilege, they claim or take it even though they have no right to do so The assembly arrogated to itself the right to make changes [VERB + to] He arrogated the privilege to himself alone [VERB noun + to] Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s Dictionary
- arrogate verb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
arrogate something (to yourself) to claim or take something that you have no right to I do not arrogate to myself the right to decide
- arrogate - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
arrogate (third-person singular simple present arrogates, present participle arrogating, simple past and past participle arrogated) (transitive, uncommon) To appropriate or lay claim to something for oneself without right [from 1530s] Synonyms: commandeer, expropriate, usurp Antonyms: abandon, abdicate, relinquish, renounce
- arrogate, v. meanings, etymology and more - Oxford English Dictionary
What does the verb arrogate mean? There are nine meanings listed in OED's entry for the verb arrogate , three of which are labelled obsolete See ‘Meaning use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence
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