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Definition of sequester verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

sequester

verb
 
/sɪˈkwestə(r)/
 
/sɪˈkwestər/
(law)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they sequester
 
/sɪˈkwestə(r)/
 
/sɪˈkwestər/
he / she / it sequesters
 
/sɪˈkwestəz/
 
/sɪˈkwestərz/
past simple sequestered
 
/sɪˈkwestəd/
 
/sɪˈkwestərd/
past participle sequestered
 
/sɪˈkwestəd/
 
/sɪˈkwestərd/
-ing form sequestering
 
/sɪˈkwestərɪŋ/
 
/sɪˈkwestərɪŋ/
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  1. (also sequestrate)
    to take control of somebody’s property or assets until a debt has been paid
  2. sequester somebody to keep a jury together in a place, in order to prevent them from talking to other people about a court case, or learning about it in the newspapers, on television, etc.
  3. Word Originlate Middle English: from Old French sequestrer or late Latin sequestrare ‘commit for safe keeping’, from Latin sequester ‘trustee’.
See sequester in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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