See also: Confiscation Confiscating Confiscatory Conflict Confer Confidence Conformity Conflate Confident Confluence Conferred Confront Confused Confirmation Confederation Confusion Confounded Configuration Conflagration Confianza Confidentiality Would Are Configurator Of
1. Confiscation noun seizure, appropriation, impounding, forfeiture, expropriation, sequestration, takeover Anyone convicted of drug trafficking would be liable to Confiscation of assets and imprisonment
Confiscation, Convicted
2. Confiscation the taking away of the property of another, usually by the state. In relation to the acquisition of land and the like for state projects, most systems have procedures allowing for appeal and always with compensation
Confiscation, Compensation
3. 39 synonyms and near synonyms of Confiscation from the Merriam-Webster Thesaurus
Confiscation
4. Find another word for Confiscation
Confiscation
5. Confiscation: as in annexation, assumption.
Confiscation
6. Confiscation is the taking of private property for public use without compensation. It may occur legally when the government seizes property used in illegal practices, such as a boat used to smuggle illegal drugs
Confiscation, Compensation
7. Confiscation may also be referred to as forfeiture.
Confiscation
8. Confiscation, Expropriation, Nationalization (CEN), and Deprivation (CEND) Insurance — political risk coverage purchased by businesses that have an ownership interest in property abroad, to cover loss resulting from government nationalization of the property or other action by the government that effectively deprives the insured of the property or restricts its operations.
Confiscation, Cen, Cend, Coverage, Cover
9. 'Confiscation' is a 12 letter word starting with C and ending with N Crossword clues for 'Confiscation' Synonyms, crossword answers and other related words for Confiscation We hope that the following list of synonyms for the word Confiscation will help you to finish your crossword today.
Confiscation, Crossword, Clues
10. Find 3 ways to say Confiscation, along with antonyms, related words, and example sentences at Thesaurus.com, the world's most trusted free thesaurus.
Confiscation, Com
11. With the democrats and gun control groups upping their rhetoric about gun control, many gun owners are worried about gun Confiscation
Control, Confiscation
12. Their concerns are valid and they are steeped in a history of gun Confiscation
Concerns, Confiscation
13. Confiscation is also known as forfeiture in some jurisdictions
Confiscation
14. Confiscation of assets or property is the permanent deprivation of property by order of a court or administrative procedures, which transfers the ownership of …
Confiscation, Court
15. Confiscation, from the Latin confiscatio 'joining to the fiscus, i.e
Confiscation, Confiscatio
16. Confiscation Acts, (1861–64), in U.S
Confiscation
17. The first Confiscation Act, passed on Aug
Confiscation
18. Beto O’Rourke is all about gun Confiscation
Confiscation
19. / ˌkɑːn.fəˈskeɪ.ʃ ə n / the act of confiscating a possession from someone (= taking it away as a punishment) or an example of this: There was a record number of Confiscations by customs officers …
Confiscating, Confiscations, Customs
20. ‘This includes Confiscation of computers if police believe that a record of a firearm is contained therein.’ Synonyms seizure , impounding, commandeering, requisition, requisitioning, appropriation, expropriation, sequestration, taking away, annexation
Confiscation, Computers, Contained, Commandeering
21. “Confiscation all comes down to this: the government makes the rules, changes the rules, and enforces the rules
Confiscation, Comes, Changes
22. Confiscation of property synonyms, Confiscation of property pronunciation, Confiscation of property translation, English dictionary definition of Confiscation of property
Confiscation
23. BP-A0402 Confiscation AND DISPOSITION OF CONTRABAND CDFRM APR 10 U.S
Confiscation, Contraband, Cdfrm
24. Confiscation (countable and uncountable, plural Confiscations) The act or process of confiscating
Confiscation, Countable, Confiscations, Confiscating
25. [uncountable, countable] the act of officially taking something away from somebody, especially as a punishment If found guilty of this crime they face heavy fines, Confiscation of goods and even imprisonment
Countable, Crime, Confiscation
26. Confiscation: 1 n seizure by the government Synonyms: arrogation Types: expropriation taking out of an owner's hands (especially taking property by public authority) Type of: seizure the taking possession of something by legal process
Confiscation
27. Gold Confiscation Australia 1959
Confiscation
28. A few years before a mania for the prices of gold in 1980.-Gold Confiscation Britain 1966
Confiscation
29. What does Confiscation mean? The appropriation of private property without just compensation for the public use or treasury, often as a penalty resul
Confiscation, Compensation
30. Confiscation (n.) "act of appropriating as forfeit," 1540s, from French Confiscation, from Latin Confiscationem (nominative confiscatio), noun of action from past-participle stem of confiscare, from assimilated form of com "with, together" (see con-) + fiscu s "public treasury" (see fiscal).
Confiscation, Confiscationem, Confiscatio, Confiscare, Com, Con
31. Confiscation + French database ID
Confiscation
32. Immediately after the “Confiscation”, the government set a new official rate for gold that was much higher as part of the Gold Reserve Act 1934
Confiscation
33. Thus, in terms of Confiscation, if a legislature bans firearms and provides for a court Confiscation order and police enforcement of said court Confiscation order, the courts consider that “due process”
Confiscation, Court, Courts, Consider
34. The proposed Confiscation law would be so much more than just a gun grab
Confiscation
35. 1 day ago · Last November, Bill Blair, the federal Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, refused to answer questions about the costs associated with the Liberal Government’s gun ban and Confiscation program imposed by Order-in-Council on May 1, 2020.
Costs, Confiscation, Council
36. According to The Washington Post, the Obama administration is considering a “national database” of all firearms in the United States to “track the movement and sale of weapons.” If such a database comes to fruition the database will lead to Confiscation
Considering, Comes, Confiscation
37. Confiscation, in property law, act of appropriating private property for state or sovereign use
Confiscation
38. Confiscation as an incident of state power can be traced back to the Roman Empire and earlier; it has existed in some form in most countries around the world
Confiscation, Can, Countries
39. A quick follow-up on the recent Confiscation of two AR pistols by California DOJ officers in San Diego
Confiscation, California
40. Similar rates of non-compliance have been observed for constitutionally suspect Confiscation laws in other states; in fact, after New Jersey banned the civilian possession of standard magazines
Compliance, Constitutionally, Confiscation, Civilian
41. Gun Confiscation has always been the goal
Confiscation
CONFISCATION [ˌkänfəˈskāSH(ə)n]
Confiscation (from the Latin confiscare "to consign to the fiscus, i.e. transfer to the treasury") is a legal form of seizure by a government or other public authority. The word is also used, popularly, of spoliation under legal forms, or of any seizure of property as punishment or in enforcement of the law.
See Synonyms at appropriate. 1. Seized by a government; appropriated. 2. Having lost property through confiscation. [Latin cōnfiscāre, cōnfiscāt : com-, com- + fiscus, treasury .] con′fis·ca′tion n. con′fis·ca′tor n. American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.
Jump to navigation Jump to search. Confiscation (from the Latin confiscare "to consign to the fiscus, i.e. transfer to the treasury") is a legal form of seizure by a government or other public authority. The word is also used, popularly, of spoliation under legal forms, or of any seizure of property as punishment or in enforcement of the law.
In the United Kingdom a confiscation order is a court order made under part 2 (England & Wales), part 3 (Scotland) or part 4 (Northern Ireland) of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 requiring a convicted defendant to pay a specified sum of money to the state by a specified date. United States