| APPROPRIABLE | • appropriable adj. (Law) Able to be appropriated. • APPROPRIABLE adj. capable of being appropriated. |
| APPROPRIATED | • appropriated v. Simple past tense and past participle of appropriate. • appropriated adj. Set aside for a specified purpose. • APPROPRIATE v. to take exclusive possession of. |
| APPROPRIATES | • appropriates v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of appropriate. • APPROPRIATE v. to take exclusive possession of. |
| APPROPRIATOR | • appropriator n. A person who appropriates something. • appropriator n. The religious organization that owns the income of a benefice. • APPROPRIATOR n. one who appropriates. |
| DISPROPRIATE | • dispropriate v. (Transitive) To cancel the appropriation of; to disappropriate. • DISPROPRIATE v. (obsolete) to disappropriate. |
| EXPROPRIABLE | • expropriable adj. Capable of being expropriated, or seized for public use. • EXPROPRIABLE adj. that can be expropriated. |
| EXPROPRIATED | • expropriated v. Simple past tense and past participle of expropriate. • EXPROPRIATE v. to deprive of possession or proprietary rights. |
| EXPROPRIATES | • expropriates v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of expropriate. • EXPROPRIATE v. to deprive of possession or proprietary rights. |
| EXPROPRIATOR | • expropriator n. Agent noun of expropriate; one who expropriates. • EXPROPRIATOR n. one who expropriates. |
| IMPROPRIATED | • impropriated v. Simple past tense and past participle of impropriate. • IMPROPRIATE v. to transfer ecclesiastical revenue to a layman. |
| IMPROPRIATES | • impropriates v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of impropriate. • IMPROPRIATE v. to transfer ecclesiastical revenue to a layman. |
| IMPROPRIATOR | • impropriator n. (Archaic) A layperson in possession of ecclesiastical property. • IMPROPRIATOR n. a layman who is in possession of a benefice or its revenues. |