Crossword clues for cession
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cession \Ces"sion\, n. [L. cessio, fr. cedere to give way: cf. F. Cession. See Cede.]
A yielding to physical force. [Obs.]
--Bacon.Concession; compliance. [Obs.]
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A yielding, or surrender, as of property or rights, to another person; the act of ceding.
A cession of the island of New Orleans.
--Bancroft. (Eccl. Law) The giving up or vacating a benefice by accepting another without a proper dispensation.
(Civil Law) The voluntary surrender of a person's effects to his creditors to avoid imprisonment.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
late 14c., "a relinquishing," from Old French cession "cession; death" (13c.), from Latin cessionem (nominative cessio) "a giving up, surrendering," noun of action from past participle stem of cedere "to go away, yield" (see cede). Related: Cessionary.
Wiktionary
n. 1 That which is ceded. Insurance: (part of) a risk which is transferred from one actor to another. 2 The giving up of rights, property etc. which one is entitled to.
WordNet
n. the act of ceding [syn: ceding]
Wikipedia
The act of cession is the assignment of property to another entity. In international law it commonly refers to land transferred by treaty. Ballentine's Law Dictionary defines cession as "a surrender; a giving up; a relinquishment of jurisdiction by a board in favor of another agency" In contrast with annexation, where property is forcibly given up, cession is voluntary or at least apparently so.
Usage examples of "cession".
This case involved the validity of an act of Congress directing the judge of the territorial court of Florida to examine and adjudge claims of Spanish subjects against the United States and to report his decisions with evidence thereon to the Secretary of the Treasury who in turn was to pay the award to the claimant if satisfied that the decisions were just and within the terms of the treaty of cession.
The Marquis de Lauzun took her at her word, and never forgave her for the cession of the principalities of Dombes and Eu to M.
The merchant duly signed the contract, at the foot of which I had the honour of inscribing my name as a witness, and then I took the merchant to the mother, and he witnessed her cession of her daughter.
Lastly, in 1860, while the Anglo-French forces were entering Pekin, Russia obtained without a blow the cession of the region south of the Amur and east of the Ussuri, stretching along the coast to the Corean frontier.
He wanted outright cession of Guienne, Calais, and all the former Plantagenet holdings in France, plus an enormous ransom of three million ecus for Jean, in return for which he would give up his claim to the French crown.
Caesar, not being the man to have his plans upset for nothing, made conditions for his retreat, to which Bentivoglio consented, only too happy to be quit of him at this price: the conditions were the cession of Castello Bolognese, a fortress between Imola and Faenza, the payment of a tribute of 9000 ducats, and the keeping for his service of a hundred men-at-arms and two thousand infantry.
It would not be contended that it extends so far as to authorize what the Constitution forbids, or a change in the character of the government or in that of one of the States, or a cession of any portion of the territory of the latter, without its consent.
Arrived in Buenos Ayres just at the moment of the cession of the seven Jesuit towns, he sees his opportunity, learns Guarani in the brief space of six or seven weeks, and joins the Indians.
Keiki Moana, their ancestral refuge with a few human caretakers in Hawaii, Kelekolio Pela setting forth the Dao Kai, the cession of Nauru to descendants who had become a nation.
Nazir Jung, proclaimed him Subadar of the Deccan, escorted him to Hyderabad, and received from him the cession of considerable fresh grants of territory to the French.
Combined with arrears in ransom, cancellation of the “hostages’“ treaty, to which he had assented, and non-fulfillment of other cessions, it brought his own honor into disrepute and left him no way out, so he claimed, but to return to captivity.
At this parley Coucy and his fellow envoys offered new cessions and adjustments and the entire county of Angouleme as dowry for Catherine, but the English remained suspicious.
These cessions already constitute one fourth of the States of the Union.
The Creek land cessions made the Seminoles all the more determined to hold their own homelands.
A majority of the Creeks repudiated the land cessions but were mercilessly persecuted under the policies of Georgia governor George Troup.