abigeat
noun/əˈbɪd͡ʒi.ət/
Etymology
From Latin abigeatus, from the verb ab agō (“to drive”).
- derived from abigeatus
Definitions
Theft of cattle by driving it away with the intention of feloniously appropriating it.
- But the driving away of goods, or taking away, and detaining, another mans boat, without violence, by the number of 10 preſent, is a wrong, unwarrantable, and oppreſſive act, and a ſort of abigeat and thift, but is not properly a ryot […]
- The contracting Republics [...] do hereby agree, reciprocally, to surrender persons [...] having committed [...] any of the following crimes, to wit: homicide, [...] abigeat (cattle stealing), [...] and, in general, any crime or offense
- The shepherds of the Golden Age let their flocks out to pasture without fearing the abigeat, they feared only the wild beasts.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for abigeat. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA