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sequesterv. to keep separate or apart. In so-called "high-profile" crimina...
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sequester1. In medicine, to set apart, detach or separate a small portion of tissue from the rest. May be naturally occurring or iatrogenic. 2. In bone, for a piece of dead bone to separate from the sound bone. 3. In biochemistry, to isolate a constituent of a system by chelation or other means. From the French sequester, from the late Latin sequestrare, me [..]
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sequesterTo separate. Sometimes juries are sequestered from outside influences during their deliberations.
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sequesterKeeping a jury in isolation, under close supervision and away from the public and media, during a trial.
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sequesterthe sequester (short for 'sequestration process') is a series of cuts in the US federal budget, which are imposed automatically if certain spending targets are not metThe debate over the seq [..]
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sequesterlate 14c., "remove" something, "quarantine, isolate" (someone); "excommunicate;" also intransitive, "separate oneself from," from Old French sequestrer (14c.), [..]
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sequesterto separate, set apart, hold aside for safekeeping or awaiting some determination; jurors are sequestered when not permitted to return home until the case is closed
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sequesterto isolate or remove.
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sequester1) To isolate, separate, or keep a person or people apart from others. For example, a jury in a highly publicized trial may be sequestered to prevent them from reading or hearing anything about the ca [..]
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sequesterv. To cause to withdraw or retire, as from society or public life.
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sequesterDefinition Variationsequestrate
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sequestertered -ter·ing [Anglo-French sequestrer, from Middle French, from Latin sequestrare to hand over to a trustee, from sequester third party to whom disputed property is entrusted, agent, from ...
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sequester(L: sequestrare= to commit for safekeeping) to set apart. Sequestrate= to chemically bind an ion so that it cannot react. Carbondioxide sequestration= the permanent binding of this gas, taking it our [..]
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sequesterSequester means to keep separate or apart from others. In "high-profile" criminal prosecutions which have been highly publicized the jury is sometimes sequestered in a hotel without access t [..]
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sequester(v) requisition forcibly, as of enemy property(v) keep away from others(v) take temporary possession of as a security, by legal authority(v) undergo sequestration by forming a stable compound with an [..]
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sequesterN M mediator| go-between
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sequesterTo separate. Sometimes juries are separated from outside influences during their deliberations. For example, this may occur during a highly publicized trial.
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sequesterSeparate or isolate; for example, to separate witnesses from each other, to separate property from a party and place it in the custody of the court or a third person, etc.
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sequesterTo separate. Sometimes juries are sequestered from outside influences during their deliberations.
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sequesterTo separate. Sometimes juries are separated from outside influences during the trial and/or their deliberations. For example, this may occur during a highly publicized trial.
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sequesterTo separate. Sometimes juries are sequestered from outside influences during their deliberations.
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sequesterTo separate. Sometimes juries are sequestered from outside influences during their deliberations.
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sequesterTo separate. Sometimes juries are sequestered from outside influences during their deliberations.
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sequesterSeparate or isolate; for example, to separate witnesses from each other, to separate property from a party and place it in the custody of the court or a third person, etc.
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sequesterWitnesses are asked to leave the courtroom while other(s) testify.
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sequesterTo separate. Sometimes juries are separated from outside influences during their deliberations. For example, this may occur during a highly publicized trial.
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sequesterTo undergo sequestration.
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sequesterTo form a stable, water-soluble complex.
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sequester
To separate from all external influence; to seclude; to withdraw.
''The jury was sequestered from the press by the judge's order.''
* Hooker
*: when men most sequester themselves from action
T [..]
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