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deforce
[ dih-fawrs, -fohrs ]
verb (used with object)
Law.
deforced, deforcing.
- to withhold (property, especially land) by force or violence, as from the rightful owner.
- to eject or evict by force.
deforce
/ ɪˈɔː /
verb
- to withhold (property, esp land) wrongfully or by force from the rightful owner
- to eject or keep forcibly from possession of property
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Derived Forms
- ˈڴǰԳ, noun
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Other 51Թ Forms
- ·ڴǰmԳ noun
- ·ڴǰİ noun
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51Թ History and Origins
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51Թ History and Origins
Origin of deforce1
C13: from Anglo-French, from deforcer
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
And if one thing stands out in his music, it is the absence of “human pathos and emotional compulsion,” said the cellist Arne Deforce in an interview.
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“The majority is between one and 10 millimeters,” said DeForce, 33.
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But DeForce and 37 other scientists and crew members on the 134-foot SSV Robert C. Seamans found plenty of plastic.
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“You could see little mini veins of plastic just going through the ocean,” DeForce said.
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SEA plans to study whether the plastics are affecting the tiny living creatures the crew collected, DeForce said.
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