Enfranchisement

  • 11enfranchisement — en fran·chise·ment || tʃɪzmÉ™nt n. granting of certain rights (especially the right to vote); liberation, emancipation …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 12enfranchisement — n 1. naturalization, admission to citizenship; the vote, the right to vote. 2. authorization, accordance; license, privilege, warranty, charter; sanction, grant, concession, carte blanche; permission, leave. 3. emancipation, affranchisement,… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 13enfranchisement — en·fran·chise·ment …

    English syllables

  • 14enfranchisement — See: enfranchise …

    English dictionary

  • 15enfranchisement — The act of making free (as from slavery); giving a franchise or freedom to; investiture with privileges or capacities of freedom, or municipal or political liberty. Conferring the privilege of voting upon classes of persons who have not… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 16enfranchisement — The act of making free (as from slavery); giving a franchise or freedom to; investiture with privileges or capacities of freedom, or municipal or political liberty. Conferring the privilege of voting upon classes of persons who have not… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 17enfranchisement — The act of enfranchising. See enfranchise; franchise …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 18enfranchisement — noun 1. freedom from political subjugation or servitude • Derivationally related forms: ↑enfranchise • Hypernyms: ↑freedom 2. a statutory right or privilege granted to a person or group by a government (especially the rights of citizenship and… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 19enfranchisement of copyholds — In English law, the conversion of copyhold into freehold tenure, by a conveyance of the fee simple of the property from the lord of the manor to the copyholder, or by a release from the lord of all seigniorial rights, etc., which destroys the… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 20enfranchisement of copyholds — In English law, the conversion of copyhold into freehold tenure, by a conveyance of the fee simple of the property from the lord of the manor to the copyholder, or by a release from the lord of all seigniorial rights, etc., which destroys the… …

    Black's law dictionary