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- SECEDE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of SECEDE is to withdraw from an organization (such as a religious communion or political party or federation) How to use secede in a sentence
- SECEDE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
SECEDE definition: 1 to become independent of a country or area of government: 2 to become independent of a country… Learn more
- Secede - definition of secede by The Free Dictionary
secede (sɪˈsiːd) vb (often foll by: from) (of a person, section, etc) to make a formal withdrawal of membership, as from a political alliance, church, organization, etc [C18: from Latin sēcēdere to withdraw, from sē- apart + cēdere to go]
- secede - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Verb secede (third-person singular simple present secedes, present participle seceding, simple past and past participle seceded) (intransitive) To split from or to withdraw from membership of a political union, an alliance or an organisation
- SECEDE definition in American English | Collins English Dictionary
If a region or group secedes from the country or larger group to which it belongs, it formally becomes a separate country or stops being a member of the larger group Singapore seceded from the Federation of Malaysia and became an independent sovereign state The region decided to secede
- Can US States Secede? What the Constitution Says
The Constitution doesn’t explicitly ban secession, but the Civil War and Supreme Court rulings make clear that states can’t legally leave
- secede verb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
Definition of secede verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary secede (from something) (of a state, country, etc ) to officially leave a larger state or organization of states and become independent The Republic of Panama seceded from Colombia in 1903
- South Carolina Declaration of Secession (1860)
The victory of Republican presidential candidate Abraham Lincoln in the 1860 elections convinced South Carolina legislators that it was no longer in their state’s interest to remain in the Union South Carolina declared its secession from the United States Citing “an increasing hostility on the part of the non-slaveholding states to the institution of slavery,” South Carolina insisted
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