Concept cluster: Activities > Disenfranchisement
v
(civil law, transitive) To transfer the title of from one to another; to alienate.
n
An amount abated; that which is taken away by way of reduction; deduction; decrease; a rebate or discount allowed; in particular from a tax.
n
The act of abjugating. An unyoking, freeing, or uncoupling.
n
(rare) A separating; a removal; a going away.
v
(transitive) To dissolve (a marital union) on the grounds that it is not valid.
n
The act, process, or result of cancelling; as, the cancellation of certain words in a contract, or of the contract itself.
v
(transitive) To demote (a partner in a firm) to a salaried employee.
n
The disposal of objects in this way.
n
The withdrawal of accreditation from something.
n
The selling off of something previously acquired.
v
(ergative) to make something inactive or no longer effective
v
(transitive) To cease to attribute (a work of art or literature, etc.) to a particular person.
n
Discontinuance of attributing a work of art or literature, etc. to a particular creator, especially in a case where a work is reassigned from a prominent creator to a lesser or unknown creator.
n
The act or an instance of debarring.
v
(transitive, industrial relations) To annul a labor union.
v
To remove or revoke a commission.
v
(law) To legally revoke the registration or charter of a corporate entity.
n
(nonstandard) Disestablishment.
v
To annul or render void a contract or stipulation; to abrogate.
v
(figuratively) To formally remove the rights and authority of a member of the clergy.
n
(rare, archaic) The act of depriving, as of furniture, equipment, or a garrison.
v
To undo or annul legislation.
n
The act or process of a license being removed or revoked, either in connection with censure or solely because of new-onset incapacity without fault.
n
delisting
n
Cessation of occupation (occupying) of a place.
n
The removal of a penalty for something.
v
(transitive) To remove a penalty from.
v
(transitive, formal) To prevent someone from utilizing a platform to express their opinion.
v
(transitive) To reduce the level of priority of.
v
(transitive) To take something away from (someone) and keep it away; to deny someone something.
v
(transitive, Wikimedia jargon) To revoke the sysop privileges of.
n
(obsolete) Dethronement.
v
(law, transitive) To take away, as an authority, title, etc., to deprive; to alienate, as an estate.
v
(transitive) to free (someone) of a misconception or misapprehension; to unveil a falsehood held by (someone)
v
(transitive) To cause a loss of affection, sympathy or loyalty in; to alienate or estrange.
n
The termination of an affiliation; the act of ceasing to be associated with something.
v
(obsolete, rare, transitive) To alienate from allegiance.
v
(transitive) To relinquish (land etc.) previously annexed.
v
To remove something that has been allocated to someone; often to reassign it elsewhere.
n
The act of disappropriating; of taking something away from someone.
v
(transitive) To exclude (a person) from something.
v
(transitive, UK, law) To deprive (a bencher) of his privileges.
n
The act of disbenching.
n
One who or that which disbuds.
v
(transitive) To divest of a clout.
v
(transitive) To deprive of a commission or trust.
v
(transitive, UK, Oxford and Cambridge universities, historical) To deprive of the right to deal with undergraduates.
n
The occurrence of something being discontinued; a cessation; an incomplete ending.
v
(transitive) To deprive of employment.
v
To remove authority or (official) confidence from (someone or some group) to do something (such as administer a state function), as by demoting, disestablishing, or unincorporating a group.
v
(transitive, of a person) To disappoint.
v
(transitive) To cease to endorse; to withdraw endorsement.
v
To deprive of an endowment.
v
(transitive) To deprive someone of a franchise, generally of the right to vote.
v
(transitive) To cancel enrolment of; to remove from a list.
n
The ejection of a member from a Native American tribe.
n
The act of being disenthroned.
n
A process or an instance of disentitling.
v
To abolish (an existing position of employment).
v
(transitive) To deprive of features; to mar the features of.
v
(transitive) To subject to disfellowshipment.
v
(transitive) To deprive someone of some privilege, especially the right to vote; to disenfranchise.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To disinherit.
n
The act of disheriting, or debarring from inheritance.
v
(obsolete) To disinherit.
n
(obsolete) The act of disinheriting or state of being disinherited; disinheritance.
v
(transitive) To free from illusion.
n
(countable) The act or process of disenchanting or freeing from a false belief.
v
To revoke an impeachment.
v
In ecclesiastical law, to remove (ecclesiastical property) from control or management of a layperson.
v
(US) To revoke the charter of an incorporated town or city.
n
Deprivation of the rights and privileges of a corporation.
n
disherison
v
(transitive) To exclude from inheritance; to disown.
v
To reduce investment, or cease to invest.
n
(obsolete) Release from obligation.
v
(transitive) To repudiate any connection to; to renounce.
n
(obsolete) Act of dispanding, or state of being dispanded.
n
(obsolete) One who dispends or expends; a steward.
v
To deprive someone of possession in general.
v
(transitive) To cause to be no longer property; to dispossess of.
v
(transitive) To cancel the appropriation of; to disappropriate.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To strip of provisions; to disfurnish.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To throw out of rank or into confusion.
n
(figuratively) Dispossession.
n
disseizin
v
(obsolete) To banish or drive from a country.
v
(transitive) To deprive of a title or right.
v
(transitive) To deprive of utility; to render useless.
v
(transitive) To strip, deprive, or dispossess (someone) of something (such as a right, passion, privilege, or prejudice).
adj
(law) Serving or tending to divest, or strip of a right or possession.
v
To free from any controlling influence, especially from anything which exerts undue or evil influence
n
Alternative form of exauthoration [(obsolete) Deprivation of authority or dignity; degradation.]
v
(obsolete) To deprive of authority or office; to depose or discharge.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To exclude from participation in; to excommunicate.
v
To disinherit.
n
A disinheriting; disherison.
n
A disinheriting; disherison.
v
(transitive, historical, Ancient Rome, done to a person) Banish from proximity to Rome for a set time; compare relegate.
v
To debar, or cause to withdraw temporarily, from any privilege, from the execution of an office, from the enjoyment of income, etc.
v
(transitive) To set (someone) free from the influence of guile; to undeceive.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To free from an accusation; to make no charge against; to acquit.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To make someone childless.
v
(transitive) To revoke the citizenship of (a person).
n
The removal or reversion of a classification or classified status from something.
v
(transitive) To undo or annul the conviction (judgement of guilt) against.
v
(archaic, transitive) To free from possession by a devil or evil spirit; to exorcise.
v
(transitive) No longer to deserve (privileges, respect, etc.) that one had previously earned.
v
(transitive) To revoke one's endorsement of.
n
The process of unenrolling.
v
To disestablish.
v
(transitive, rare) To revoke the granting of; to withdraw the approval or allowance of.
v
To cause to cease having a mother or to fail to mother properly.
v
(transitive) To deprive of necessary provision; to unfurnish.
v
(transitive) To deprive of, or detach from, the self.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To render other than seven; to make to be no longer seven.
n
The act of unsubscribing
v
(transitive, rare) To deprive of the position or office of a vicar.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To liberate; to set free; to deliver.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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