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Preemption   /prˌiˈɛmpʃən/   Listen
Preemption

noun
1.
The judicial principle asserting the supremacy of federal over state legislation on the same subject.  Synonym: pre-emption.
2.
The right of a government to seize or appropriate something (as property).  Synonym: pre-emption.
3.
The right to purchase something in advance of others.  Synonym: pre-emption.
4.
A prior appropriation of something.  Synonym: pre-emption.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Preemption" Quotes from Famous Books



... legislation of Congress in relation to another branch of the subject. Many who have not the ability to buy at present prices settle on those lands with the hope of acquiring from their cultivation the means of purchasing under preemption laws from time to time passed by Congress. For this encroachment on the rights of the United States they excuse themselves under the plea of their own necessities; the fact that they dispossess nobody and only enter upon the waste domain: that they give additional ...
— Complete State of the Union Addresses from 1790 to the Present • Various

... money. And since a great number of the Western farmers had simply taken up their lands, before they were thrown open to sale, and made improvements on them without procuring titles, they feared the enforcement of the federal law against them and clamored for a preemption system which would secure them their land, when the day of sales did come, at the minimum price, $1.25 per acre. A still better plan was already strongly urged, the free gift of small tracts of land to all who would go West and build homes. Not only would this be good ...
— Expansion and Conflict • William E. Dodd

... work to do. Ten miles from Sauk Center there was a sturdy Swede who was at one time speaker in one branch of the Swedish parliament and for a while secretary to the king. He moved to Minnesota about the year '60. It seems he had not learned the art of graft, and he was poor. He took up a preemption and built him a little log house 12x16. One day he took a load of logs to the mill and, stumbling, fell on the saw. This caught him in the back and split it open, and also took a stab ...
— Trees, Fruits and Flowers of Minnesota, 1916 • Various



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