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impropriate
verb
- tr to transfer (property, rights, etc) from the Church into lay hands
adjective
- transferred in this way
Derived Forms
- 颈尘藢辫谤辞辫谤颈藞补迟颈辞苍, noun
- 颈尘藞辫谤辞辫谤颈藢补迟辞谤, noun
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of impropriate1
Example Sentences
鈥淣o matter how you slice it, both Musk and Ramaswamy are saying native born Americans just aren鈥檛 good enough. That鈥檚 a lie and a deeply impropriate thing for any government official to say,鈥 Fox News columnist David Marcus wrote in a Thursday post.
Thus, in 1622, Archbishop Ussher in a Report of Bective parish said it belonged to Bartholomew Dillon, Esq. of Riverstown, his Majesty鈥檚 farmer of the impropriate property.
Impropriate, im-pr艒鈥瞤ri-膩t, v.t. to appropriate to private use: to place ecclesiastical property in the hands of a layman.鈥攁dj.
Apparently, Thurstan, Archbishop of Canterbury, had referred to Theobald the question whether monks could legally impropriate churches and tithe.
The End impropriate, and the Meaning low.
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