sequester (v.)
late 14c., sequestren, transitive, "remove (something), set aside; quarantine, isolate (someone); excommunicate;" also intransitive, "separate oneself from," from Old French sequestrer (14c.) and directly from Late Latin sequestrare "place in safekeeping, give up for safekeeping" in a transferred sense, "remove, separate;" from Latin sequester "trustee, mediator, the one into whose hands a thing was placed until the dispute was settled," noun use of an adjective meaning "intermediate," which probably is related to sequi "to follow" (from PIE root *sekw- (1) "to follow").
The legal meaning "seize by authority, confiscate" is attested from 1510s. The alternative verb sequestrate is early 15c. (Chauliac), from the Latin past participle sequestratus. Related: Sequestered; sequestering.
Trends of sequester
updated on June 12, 2024
Dictionary entries near sequester
sequel
sequela
sequence
sequent
sequential
sequester
sequestration
sequin
sequitur
sequoia
*ser-