英:[ɪ'vɪkʃn]
美:[ɪ'vɪkʃn]
英:[ɪ'vɪkʃn]
美:[ɪ'vɪkʃn]
复数:evictions
词根:evict
vt.evict 驱逐;逐出
15世纪中期,“恢复,复原”,源自古法语 éviction,直接来自晚期拉丁语 evictionem(主格 evictio),“通过司法裁决恢复自己的财产”,动作名词,来自 evincere 的过去分词词干,字面意思是“克服,征服”(见 evict)。从1580年代开始,“司法判决的剥夺,通过法律程序从他人的占有中恢复土地或房屋的所有权。”
Middle English, from Late Latin evictus, past participle of evincere, from Latin, to vanquish, win a point — more at evince
The first known use of evict was in the 15th century
evildoernoun
a person who does evil
evil1 of 2adjective
morally bad : wicked
causing harm : tending to injure
marked by misfortune
evil days
evil2 of 2noun
something that brings sorrow, trouble, or destruction
the fact of suffering or wrongdoing
evidentlyadverb
in an evident manner : obviously
a document evidently forged
evidence1 of 2noun
an outward sign : indication gave no evidence that he was going to bunt
evidence of the life of ancient people
material presented to a court to help find the truth in a matter
evidence2 of 2verb
to be or give evidence of : prove
evidence1 of 2noun
an outward sign : indication gave no evidence that he was going to bunt
evidence of the life of ancient people
material presented to a court to help find the truth in a matter
evidence2 of 2verb
to be or give evidence of : prove
evidence1 of 2noun
an outward sign : indication gave no evidence that he was going to bunt
evidence of the life of ancient people
material presented to a court to help find the truth in a matter
evidence2 of 2verb
to be or give evidence of : prove
evidence1 of 2noun
an outward sign : indication gave no evidence that he was going to bunt
evidence of the life of ancient people
material presented to a court to help find the truth in a matter
evidence2 of 2verb
to be or give evidence of : prove
evictverb
to put (a person) out from property by legal action
1 Xan has her own challenge, when the doctor, designated by the co-op’s board, tells her she must get B to leave or face eviction.
2 As a progressive Mexican American law student put it, “If we allowed ourselves to be hurt by a costume, how could we manage the trauma of an eviction notice?”
3 “We got a stay, baby. That means the landlord can’t go ahead with the eviction.”
4 And “Between Riverside and Crazy,” the Pulitzer Prize-winning play about a retired policeman facing eviction, was named the best play.
5 "Brother, are we still to fight against evictions?"
6 For every couplet about facing eviction as a youth while his mother battled alcoholism, there are dozens about his rapid come-up and fractured relationships with women.
7 The eviction of the site could start as early as next week, Basildon council indicated in court.
巴西尔登地方议会在法庭上暗示,对这一场地的清除可能下周就要开始了。
8 Then I read this story about a trailer park that might be facing a mass eviction, so I drove down there one night and moved in.
9 The eviction spurred a slow-moving exodus of artists, designers, craftspeople and other creative professionals in need of low-rent space to do their work.
10 Eviction riots erupted during the Depression, even though the number of poor families who faced eviction each year was a fraction of what it is today.
11 He is fighting an eviction order in court.
他正通过法庭对驱逐令表示反对.
12 Trouble is, Jen has established residency in their home, and legal eviction could take months.
13 Police have declined to intervene in a civil matter, Bracamonte said, so the family has started a formal eviction process, which they fear could take months.
14 In the 36 years since, the center has withstood speculation, rising rents, a protracted eviction battle with the Giuliani administration and more, becoming a defiant symbol of an ungentrified New York.
15 The eviction fight was such a dramatic issue that most of the leaders feared that their followers would have rallied to us without them.
16 Yet the hall, whose ownership is hotly disputed, is also a rallying point for land-use reformers protesting the eviction of impoverished tenants from the estates of wealthy landowners.
17 New York City sees 60 marshal evictions a day.
18 But rent increases, evictions and demolitions have dispersed the people who made this possible.
19 Much of the film chronicles the eviction of the last tenants, displaced by a renovation plan intended to replace their homes and workplaces with new studios and offices.
20 The fact that, on average, a white household is many times wealthier than a black household is cold comfort when you’re facing eviction or foreclosure or unemployment.
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resumptive recovery retirement withdrawal regain reclaim resumption call-back recover resume retire withdraw swallow redeem revoke re-enter retract evict recoup unsay