安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- SEQUESTER Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
Setting someone or something apart (figuratively “to the side”) from the rest is sequester’s raison d’être We frequently hear it in the context of the courtroom, as juries are sometimes sequestered for the safety of their members or to prevent the influence of outside sources on a verdict
- SEQUESTER | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
SEQUESTER definition: 1 to take temporary possession of someone's property until they have paid money that is owed or… Learn more
- SEQUESTER Definition Meaning - Dictionary. com
to remove or withdraw into solitude or retirement; seclude to remove or separate; banish; exile to keep apart from others; segregate or isolate The jury was sequestered until a verdict was reached
- Sequester - Definition, Meaning Synonyms - Vocabulary. com
The word sequester describes being kept away from others If your sister tells you to stay out of the way so she can cook dinner for her new boyfriend, you might sequester yourself in your room
- Sequester - definition of sequester by The Free Dictionary
To remove or isolate (a chemical, often a gas) from an environment by incorporation, mixing, or insertion under pressure: plants that sequester toxins from wetlands; plans to sequester carbon dioxide produced by a power plant by injection into an underground aquifer
- SEQUESTER definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
4 meanings: 1 to remove or separate 2 to retire into seclusion 3 law to take (property) temporarily out of the possession of Click for more definitions
- Sequester Definition Meaning - YourDictionary
To set off or apart; separate; segregate; often, to segregate or isolate (the jury) during a trial To remove or isolate (a chemical, often a gas) from an environment by incorporation, mixing, or insertion under pressure
- sequester - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
sequester (third-person singular simple present sequesters, present participle sequestering, simple past and past participle sequestered) To separate from all external influence; to seclude; to withdraw The jury was sequestered from the press by the judge's order
|
|
|