Need another word that means the same as “disenfranchisement”? Find 30 related words for “disenfranchisement” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
Associations of "Disenfranchisement" (30 Words)
buccaneer | Live like a buccaneer. The marauding buccaneers who used to terrorize the Mediterranean coasts. |
confiscate | Surrendered as a penalty. The government confiscated his property early in the war. |
corruption | Inducement (as of a public official) by improper means (as bribery) to violate duty (as by commiting a felony. The term hobgoblin is thought to be a corruption of Robgoblin. |
decayed | Damaged by decay; hence unsound and useless. Decayed teeth. |
depravity | A corrupt or depraved or degenerate act or practice. Its brothels its opium parlors its depravity. |
deprive | Prevent (a person or place) from having or using something. The city was deprived of its water supplies. |
despoil | Steal or violently remove valuable possessions from; plunder. The church was despoiled of its marble wall covering. |
foul | Commit a foul break the rules. It sometimes becomes advantageous to anchor during the periods of foul tide. |
impound | Seize and take legal custody of (something, especially a vehicle, goods, or documents) because of an infringement of a law. The customs agents impounded the illegal shipment. |
impoverish | Exhaust the strength or vitality of. The wars had impoverished him. |
loot | Steal (goods) in a war, riot, etc. The gang escaped with their loot. |
malodorous | Smelling very unpleasant. Leaking taps and malodorous drains. |
marauder | Someone who attacks in search of booty. A band of English marauders were surprised and overcome. |
pillage | Goods or money obtained illegally. Rebellious peasants intent on pillage. |
plunder | Plunder a town after capture. Looters moved into the disaster area to plunder shops. |
putrefaction | Moral perversion; impairment of virtue and moral principles. The breeze shifted and we caught the stench of putrefaction. |
putrid | In an advanced state of decomposition and having a foul odor. The putrid smells from the slaughterhouses. |
rancid | (used of decomposing oils or fats) having a rank smell or taste usually due to a chemical change or decomposition. Without preservatives fat goes rancid. |
ransack | Steal goods; take as spoils. Burglars ransacked her home. |
rapine | The violent seizure of someone’s property. The fruits of violence and rapine. |
rob | Rip off; ask an unreasonable price. Someone had robbed my jacket. |
rotten | Having decayed or disintegrated; usually implies foulness. Rotten floor boards. |
steal | Steal a base. At 59 95 it s an absolute steal. |
terrorism | The unlawful use of violence and intimidation, especially against civilians, in the pursuit of political aims. The fight against terrorism. |
theft | The act of taking something from someone unlawfully. He was convicted of theft. |
thieve | Take by theft. The students have been thieving my favourite art books. |
underhand | Slyly and secretly- John Donne- C.G.Bowers. Mean revenge committed underhand. |
unemployed | People who are involuntarily out of work (considered as a group. A training programme for the long term unemployed. |
usurp | Take the place of. The Hanoverian dynasty had usurped the Stuarts. |
venal | Capable of being corrupted. Local customs officers are notoriously venal. |