deprivation

deprivation
A taking of property, rights, or privileges from a person. An ecclesiastical term applied to one of the several ways in which a parson or vicar may cease to be so. Deprivation may be effected by the sentence of the ecclesiastical court or pursuant to certain penal statutes which declare the benefice void either by reason of the incumbent's omission of duty or his active commission of some forbidden act or crime. See 1 Bl Comm 393.

Ballentine's law dictionary. . 1998.

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  • déprivation — ● déprivation nom féminin Déprivation sensorielle, synonyme de désafférentation sociale. ● déprivation (expressions) nom féminin Déprivation sensorielle, synonyme de désafférentation sociale. ● déprivation (synonymes) nom féminin Déprivation… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Deprivation — may refer to: Poverty Relative deprivation Sleep deprivation Maternal deprivation See also Depravity (disambiguation) This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an …   Wikipedia

  • Deprivation — Dep ri*va tion, n. [LL. deprivatio.] 1. The act of depriving, dispossessing, or bereaving; the act of deposing or divesting of some dignity. [1913 Webster] 2. The state of being deprived; privation; loss; want; bereavement. [1913 Webster] 3.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Deprivation — (v. lat.), 1) Absetzung; 2) Entsetzung eines Geistlichen von seiner Pfründe, wobei ihm jedoch die Ausübung aller aus der geistlichen Weihe fließenden Rechte blieb …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Deprivation — (lat.), Beraubung, insbes. Entsetzung eines Geistlichen von seiner Pfründe …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Deprivation — (lat.), Beraubung, Absetzung, bes. eines Geistlichen von seiner Pfründe …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Deprivation — Deprivation, lat., Absetzung; die Entsetzung eines Geistlichen von seiner Pfründe …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • deprivation — index abridgment (disentitlement), absence (omission), attachment (seizure), censorship, condemnation (seizure) …   Law dictionary

  • deprivation — mid 15c., removal from office or position, from M.L. deprivationem (nom. deprivatio), noun of action from pp. stem of deprivare (see DEPRIVE (Cf. deprive)) …   Etymology dictionary

  • deprivation — meaning ‘depriving or being deprived (of something)’, is pronounced dep rivay shǝn, with stress on the third syllable. It should be distinguished from privation, which means ‘lack of the comforts or necessities of life’ …   Modern English usage

  • deprivation — [n] taking, keeping away; need denial, deprival, destitution, detriment, disadvantage, dispossession, distress, divestiture, divestment, expropriation, hardship, loss, privation, removal, seizure, want, withdrawal, withholding; concepts… …   New thesaurus

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