Need another word that means the same as “deprive”? Find 15 synonyms and 30 related words for “deprive” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Deprive” are: divest, strip, impoverish, dispossess, relieve, bereave, oust, overthrow, remove, topple, unseat, depose, dethrone, eject, dispel
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “deprive” as a verb can have the following definitions:
bereave | Deprive through death. Those who counsel the bereaved. |
depose | Testify to or give (evidence) under oath, typically in a written statement. He had been deposed by a military coup. |
dethrone | Remove from a position of authority or dominance. In January 1831 the Poles dethroned the Romanovs. |
dispel | Make (a doubt, feeling, or belief) disappear. Dispel doubts. |
dispossess | Deprive (someone) of land, property, or other possessions. A champion of the poor and the dispossessed. |
divest | Reduce or dispose of; cease to hold (an investment. He has divested the original play of its charm. |
eject | Leave an aircraft rapidly using an ejection seat or capsule. He ejected the spent cartridge. |
impoverish | Make (a person or area) poor. The soil was impoverished by annual burning. |
oust | Take away (a court’s jurisdiction) in a matter. The word processor has ousted the typewriter. |
overthrow | Throw a ball beyond (a receiving player. Military coups which had attempted to overthrow the King. |
relieve | Relieve oneself of troubling information. The thief relieved me of 100. |
remove | Remove something concrete as by lifting pushing or taking off or remove something abstract. The death of her mother removed the last obstacle to their marriage. |
topple | Cause to topple or tumble by pushing. Disagreement had threatened to topple the government. |
unseat | Remove from political office. The Republicans are trying to unseat the liberal Democrat. |
arrogate | Take or claim (something) without justification. They arrogate to themselves the ability to divine the nation s true interests. |
birthright | A particular right of possession or privilege a person has from birth, especially as an eldest son. Free public education is the birthright of every American child. |
buccaneer | Live like a buccaneer. The company might be a target for an individual buccaneer seeking power and prestige. |
commandeer | Enlist (someone) to help in a task. The truck was commandeered by a mob. |
confiscate | Appropriate (something, especially land) to the public treasury as a penalty. The government confiscated his property early in the war. |
depose | Force to leave (an office. He had been deposed by a military coup. |
despoil | Destroy and strip of its possession. The church was despoiled of its marble wall covering. |
disenfranchise | Deprive (someone) of the right to vote. A hard core of kids who are disenfranchised and don t feel connected to the school. |
filch | Pilfer or steal (something, especially an item of small value) in a casual way. They filched milk off morning doorsteps. |
forfeited | Surrendered as a penalty. |
impound | Take temporary possession of as a security, by legal authority. Vehicles parked where they cause an obstruction will be impounded. |
impoverish | Exhaust the strength or vitality of. The wars had impoverished him. |
loot | Steal goods from (a place), typically during a war or riot. The gang escaped with their loot. |
marauder | A person who marauds; a raider. A band of English marauders were surprised and overcome. |
pillage | The act of stealing valuable things from a place. The abbey was plundered and pillaged. |
piracy | A practice similar to piracy but in other contexts especially hijacking. Software piracy. |
plunder | Plunder a town after capture. This writer plundered from famous authors. |
raid | Conduct a raid on. An early morning raid on a bank. |
ransack | Search (a place or receptacle) thoroughly, especially in such a way as to cause harm. Burglars ransacked her home. |
rapine | The violent seizure of someone’s property. Industrial rapine. |
rob | Take property unlawfully from (a person or place) by force or threat of force. Bob thinks my suit cost 70 and even then he thinks I was robbed. |
spoliation | The act of stripping and taking by force. The spoliation of the countryside. |
steal | Move stealthily. A delicious languor was stealing over her. |
theft | The action or crime of stealing. He was convicted of theft. |
thief | A criminal who takes property belonging to someone else with the intention of keeping it or selling it. The thief stole the drugs from a doctor s surgery. |
thieve | Take by theft. The students have been thieving my favourite art books. |
usurp | Take (a position of power or importance) illegally or by force. The Hanoverian dynasty had usurped the Stuarts. |
usurpation | Wrongfully seizing and holding (an office or powers) by force (especially the seizure of a throne or supreme authority. A succession of generals who ruled by usurpation. |
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