abigeat

noun
/əˈbɪd͡ʒi.ət/

Etymology

From Latin abigeatus, from the verb ab agō (“to drive”).

  1. derived from abigeatus

Definitions

  1. 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