Definition of Sequestrable. Meaning of Sequestrable. Synonyms of Sequestrable

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Sequestrable. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Sequestrable and, of course, Sequestrable synonyms and on the right images related to the word Sequestrable.

Definition of Sequestrable

Sequestrable
Sequestrable Se*ques"tra*ble, a. Capable of being sequestered; subject or liable to sequestration.

Meaning of Sequestrable from wikipedia

- Look up sequestrate in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Sequestrate may refer to: pertaining either to secotioid or gasteroid to sequester This disambiguation...
- workers. Rural communities seized timber and other resources on the sequestrated estates of Royalists and Catholics, and on the estates of the royal family...
- Rajput Zamindar of Jagdishpur, whose estate was in the process of being sequestrated by the Revenue Board, instigated and ****umed the leadership of revolt...
- Retrieved 8 June 2021. Del Porto D, Foschini G (1 July 2020). "Salerno, sequestrate 84 milioni di pasticche di droga dell'Isis: le stesse usate dai terroristi...
- being redirected into other religious uses. The king's officers first sequestrated the ****ets of the alien priories in 1295–1303 under Edward I, and the...
- following the failed Polish November Uprising, the Dominican monastery was sequestrated. The church of the Old Catholics was disbanded in 1852. Until the end...
- only the efficiency of absorption, the ability of the fiber residue to sequestrate short-chain fatty acids, and the continued fermentation of fiber around...
- closed—its doors nailed shut—and its belongings, including the Tour, sequestrated by the state for publishing articles too close to the Germans. Rights...
- Russula was changed in 2007 when molecular analysis revealed that several sequestrate species formerly classified in Macowanites (syn. Elasmomyces) were shown...
- its own subject to the enemy power; to a writ directed to persons, "sequestrators", to enter on the property of the defendant and seize the goods. There...