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English-Thai Dictionary

Possession is nine points of the law.

IDM ใน การโต้เถียง เพื่อ ใช้  หรือ เป็นเจ้าของ ทรัพย์สิน  สิ่งของ คน ที่อยู่ ตรงนั้น  หรือ ใช้ สิ่งของ นั้น อยู่ แล้ว มัก คือ คน มีโอกาส ได้รับ  nai-kan-to-tiang-puea-chai-rue-chai-sing-kong-ti-dai-rab

 

possess

VT มี ความสามารถ  บันดาลใจ  me-kwam-sa-mad

 

possess

VT เป็นเจ้าของ  ครอบครอง  ถือครอง  hold occupy own pen-jao-kong

 

possess of

PHRV มี ความสามารถ  me-kwam-sa-mad

 

possess oneself of

IDM เป็นเจ้าของ  pen-jao-kong

 

possessed

ADJ ซึ่ง เป็นเจ้าของ  ซึ่ง ครอบครอง  owned kept sueng-pen-jao-kong

 

possessed

ADJ ถูก ครอบงำ ทางจิตใจ  โดน ผีสิง  compulsive single-minded obsessed tuk-krob-ngam-tang-jid-jai

 

possession

N การ ครอง บอล (กีฬา  kan-krong-bon

 

possession

N การครอบ งำ  การ ควบคุม  kan-krob-ngam

 

possession

N ความเป็นเจ้าของ  ownership rights proprietary kwam-pen-jao-kong

 

possession

N สิ่ง ที่ ครอบครอง อยู่  ทรัพย์สมบัติ หรือ ดินแดน ที่ ครอบครอง  personal property real estate siang-ti-krob-krong-yu

 

possessions

N ทรัพย์สมบัติ  sab-som-bad

 

possessive

ADJ เกี่ยวกับ การครอบครอง  persevering maintaining unpossessive kiao-kab-kan-krob-krong

 

possessiveness

N ความเป็นเจ้าของ  การ ยึดครอง  การ เป็นเจ้าของ  kwam-pen-jao-kong

 

possessor

N ผู้ เป็นเจ้าของ  เจ้าของ  owner holder inheritor occupant phu-pen-jao-kong

 

possessory

ADJ เกี่ยวกับ การครอบครอง  kiao-kab-kan-krob-krong

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

POSSESS

v.t.[L. possessus, possideo, a compound of po, a Russian preposition, perhaps by, and sedeo, to sit; to sit in or on. ] 1. To have the just and legal title, ownership or property of a thing; to own; to hold the title of, as the rightful proprietor, or to hold both the title and the thing. A man may possess the farm which he cultivates, or he may possess an estate in a foreign country, not in his own occupation. He may possess many farms which are occupied by tenants. In this as in other cases, the original sense of the word is enlarged, the holding or tenure being applied to the title or right, as well as to the thing itself.
2. To hold; to occupy without title or ownership.
I raise up the Chaldeans, to possess the dwelling-places that are not theirs. Habakkuk 1:6.
Neither said any of them that aught of the things which he possessed was his own. Acts 4:32.
3. To have; to occupy. The love of the world usually possesses the heart.
4. To seize; to gain; to obtain the occupation of.
The English marched towards the river Eske, intending to possess a hill called Under-Eske.
5. To have power over; as an invisible agent or spirit. Luke 8:36.
Beware what spirit rages in your breast;
For ten inspired, ten thousand are possess'd.
6. To affect by some power.
Let not your ears despise my tongue,
Which shall possess them with the heaviest sound
That ever yet they heard.
To possess of, or with, more properly to possess of, is to give possession, command or occupancy.
Of fortune's favor long possess'd
This possesses us of the most valuable blessing of human life, friendship.
To possess one's self of, to take or gain possession or command; to make one's self master of.
We possessed ourselves of the kingdom of Naples.
To possess with, to furnish or fill with something permanent; or to be retained.
It is of unspeakable advantage to possess our minds with an habitual good intention.
If they are possessed with honest minds.

 

POSSESSED

pp. Held by lawful title; occupied; enjoyed; affected by demons or invisible agents.

 

POSSESSING

ppr. Having or holding by absolute right or title; occupying; enjoying.

 

POSSESSION

n.The having, holding or detention of property in one's power or command; actual seizin or occupancy, either rightful or wrongful. One man may have the possession of a thing, and another may have the right of possession or property. If the possession is severed from the property; if A has the right of property, and B by unlawful means has gained possession, this is an injury to A. This is a bare or naked possession.
In bailment, the bailee, who receives goods to convey, or to keep for a time, has the possession of the goods, and a temporary right over them, but not the property. Property in possession, includes both the right and the occupation. Long undisturbed possession is presumptive proof of right or property in the possessor.
1. The thing possessed; land, estate or goods owned; as foreign possessions.
The house of Jacob shall possess their possessions. Obadiah 17.
When the young man heard that saying, he went away sorrowful, for he had great possessions. Matthew 19:22.
2. Any thing valuable possessed or enjoyed. Christian peace of mind is the best possession of life.
3. The state of being under the power of demons or invisible beings; madness; lunacy; as demoniacal possession.
Writ of possession, a precept directing a sheriff to put a person in peaceable possession of property recovered in ejectment.
To take possession, to enter on, or to bring within one's power or occupancy.
To give possession, to put in another's power or occupancy.

 

POSSESSION

v.t.To invest with property. [Not used. ]

 

POSSESSIONER

n.One that has possession of a thing, or power over it. [Little used. ]

 

POSSESSIVE

a.[L. possessivus.] Pertaining to possession; having possession. Possessive case, in English grammar, is the genitive case, or case of nouns and pronouns, which expresses, 1st, possession, ownership, as John's book; or 2dly, some relation of one thing to another, as Homer's admirers.

 

POSSESSOR

n.An occupant; one that has possession; a person who holds in his hands or power any species of property, real or personal. The owner or proprietor of property is the permanent possessor by legal right; the lessee of land and the bailee of goods are temporary possessors by right; the disseizor of land and the thief are wrongful possessors. 1. One that has, holds or enjoys any good or other thing.
Think of the happiness of the prophets and apostles, saints and martyrs, possessors of eternal glory.

 

POSSESSORY

a.Having possession; as a possessory lord. Possessory action, in law, an action or suit in which the right of possession only, and not that of property, is contested.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

POSSESS

Pos *sess ", v. t. [imp. & p. p. Possessed; p. pr. & vb. n.Possessing. ] Etym: [L. possessus, p. p. of possidere to have, possess, from an inseparable prep. (cf. Position ) + sedere to sit. See Sit. ]

 

1. To occupy in person; to hold or actually have in one's own keeping; to have and to hold. Houses and fields and vineyards shall be possessed again in this land. Jer. xxxii. 15.Yet beauty, though injurious, hath strange power, After offense returning, to regain Love once possessed. Milton.

 

2. To have the legal title to; to have a just right to; to be master of; to own; to have; as, to possess property, an estate, a book. I am yours, and all that I possess. Shak.

 

3. To obtain occupation or possession of; to accomplish; to gain; to seize. How. .. to possess the purpose they desired. Spenser.

 

4. To enter into and influence; to control the will of; to fill; to affect; -- said especially of evil spirits, passions, etc. "Weakness possesseth me. " Shak. Those which were possessed with devils. Matt. iv. 24.For ten inspired, ten thousand are possessed. Roscommon.

 

5. To put in possession; to make the owner or holder of property, power, knowledge, etc. ; to acquaint; to inform; -- followed by of or with before the thing possessed, and now commonly used reflexively. I have possessed your grace of what I purpose. Shak. Record a gift. .. of all he dies possessed Unto his son. Shak. We possessed our selves of the kingdom of Naples. Addison. To possess our minds with an habitual good intention. Addison.

 

Syn. -- To have; hold; occupy; control; own. -- Possess, Have. Have is the more general word. To possess denotes to have as a property. It usually implies more permanence or definiteness of control or ownership than is involved in having. A man does not possess his wife and children: they are (so to speak ) part of himself. For the same reason, we have the faculties of reason, understanding, will, sound judgment, etc. : they are exercises of the mind, not possessions.

 

POSSESSION

Pos *ses "sion, n. Etym: [F. possession, L. possessio.]

 

1. The act or state of possessing, or holding as one's own.

 

2. (Law )

 

Defn: The having, holding, or detention of property in one's power or command; actual seizin or occupancy; ownership, whether rightful or wrongful.

 

Note: Possession may be either actual or constructive; actual, when a party has the immediate occupancy; constructive, when he has only the right to such occupancy.

 

3. The thing possessed; that which any one occupies, owns, or controls; in the plural, property in the aggregate; wealth; dominion; as, foreign possessions. When the young man heard that saying, he went away sorrowful, for he had great possessions. Matt. xix. 22. Ananias, with Sapphira his wife, sold a possession. Acts v. 1. The house of Jacob shall possess their possessions. Ob. 17.

 

4. The state of being possessed or controlled, as by an evil spirit, or violent passions; madness; frenzy; as, demoniacal possession. How long hath this possession held the man Shak. To give possession, to put in another's power or occupancy. -- To put in possession. (a ) To invest with ownership or occupancy; to provide or furnish with; as, to put one in possession of facts or information. (b ) (Law ) To place one in charge of property recovered in ejectment or writ of entry. -- To take possession, to enter upon, or to bring within one's power or occupancy. -- Writ of possession (Law ), a precept directing a sheriff to put a person in peaceable possession of property recovered in ejectment or writ of entry.

 

POSSESSION

POSSESSION Pos *ses "sion, v. t.

 

Defn: To invest with property. [Obs. ]

 

POSSESSIONARY

POSSESSIONARY Pos *ses "sion *a *ry, a.

 

Defn: Of or pertaining to possession; arising from possession.

 

POSSESSIONER

POSSESSIONER Pos *ses "sion *er, n.

 

1. A possessor; a property holder. [Obs. ] "Possessioners of riches. " E. Hall. Having been of old freemen and possessioners. Sir P. Sidney.

 

2. An invidious name for a member of any religious community endowed with property in lands, buildings, etc. , as contrasted with mendicant friars. [Obs. ] Wyclif.

 

POSSESSIVAL

POSSESSIVAL Pos `ses *si "val, a.

 

Defn: Of or pertaining to the possessive case; as, a possessival termination. Earle.

 

POSSESSIVE

Pos *sess "ive, a. Etym: [L. possessivus: cf. F. possessif. ]

 

Defn: Of or pertaining to possession; having or indicating possession. Possessive case (Eng. Gram. ), the genitive case; the case of nouns and pronouns which expresses ownership, origin, or some possessive relation of one thing to another; as, Homer's admirers;the pear's flavor; the dog's faithfulness. -- Possessive pronoun, a pronoun denoting ownership; as, his name; her home; my book.

 

POSSESSIVE

POSSESSIVE Pos *sess "ive, n.

 

1. (Gram. )

 

Defn: The possessive case.

 

2. (Gram. )

 

Defn: A possessive pronoun, or a word in the possessive case.

 

POSSESSIVELY

POSSESSIVELY Pos *sess "ive *ly, adv.

 

Defn: In a possessive manner.

 

POSSESSOR

Pos *sess "or, n. Etym: [L.: cf. F. possesseur. ]

 

Defn: One who possesses; one who occupies, holds, owns, or controls; one who has actual participation or enjoyment, generally of that which is desirable; a proprietor. "Possessors of eternal glory. " Law. As if he had been possessor of the whole world. Sharp.

 

Syn. -- Owner; proprietor; master; holder; occupant.

 

POSSESSORY

Pos *sess "o *ry, a. Etym: [L. possessorius: cf. F. possessoire.]

 

Defn: Of or pertaining to possession, either as a fact or a right; of the nature of possession; as, a possessory interest; a possessory lord. Possessory action or suit (Law ), an action to regain or obtain possession of something. See under Petitory.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

possess

pos sess |pəˈzes pəˈzɛs | verb [ with obj. ] 1 have as belonging to one; own: I do not possess a television set. Law have possession of as distinct from ownership: a two-year suspended sentence for possessing cocaine. have as an ability, quality, or characteristic: he did not possess a sense of humor | (be possessed of ) : a fading blonde possessed of a powerful soprano voice. (possess oneself of ) archaic take for one's own: all that the plaintiffs did was to possess themselves of the securities. 2 (usu. be possessed ) (of a demon or spirit, esp. an evil one ) have complete power over (someone ) and be manifested through their speech or actions: she was possessed by the Devil. (of an emotion, idea, etc. ) dominate the mind of; have an overpowering influence on: I was possessed by a desire to tell her everything. 3 chiefly literary have sexual intercourse with (a woman ). 4 archaic maintain (oneself or one's mind or soul ) in a state or condition of patience or quiet: I tried to possess my soul in patience and to forget how hungry I was. [often with biblical allusion to Luke 21:19, the proper sense (gain your souls ) being misunderstood. ] PHRASES what possessed you? used to express surprise at an action regarded as extremely unwise: what possessed you to come here? ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French possesser, from Latin possess- occupied, held, from the verb possidere, from potis able, capable + sedere sit.

 

possessed

pos sessed |pəˈzest pəˈzest | adjective (of a person ) completely controlled by an evil spirit: he can turn into a possessed animal at will. PHRASES like a man (or woman ) possessed in a frenzy; madly: I trained like a man possessed, I tell you.

 

possession

pos ses sion |pəˈzeSHən pəˈzɛʃən | noun 1 the state of having, owning, or controlling something: are you in possession of any items over $500 in value? | he had taken possession of one of the sofas | the book came into my possession . Law visible power or control over something, as distinct from lawful ownership; holding or occupancy: both teams attempting to gain possession of the ball | they were imprisoned for possession of explosives. informal the state of possessing an illegal drug: they're charged with possession. (in football, basketball, and other ball games ) temporary control of the ball by a particular player or team: the ball hit a defender and Brown's quick reaction put him in possession . 2 (usu. possessions ) an item of property; something belonging to one: I was alone with no money or possessions | that photograph was Bert's most precious possession. a territory or country controlled or governed by another: France's former colonial possessions. 3 the state of being controlled by a demon or spirit: they prayed for protection against demonic possession. the state of being completely under the influence of an idea or emotion: fear took possession of my soul. DERIVATIVES pos ses sion less adjective ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French, from Latin possessio (n- ), from the verb possidere (see possess ).

 

possession order

pos ¦ses |sion order noun chiefly Brit. an order made by a court directing that possession of a property be given to the owner or other claimant.

 

possessive

pos ses sive |pəˈzesiv pəˈzɛsɪv | adjective 1 demanding someone's total attention and love: as soon as she'd been out with a guy a few times, he'd get possessive | she was possessive of our eldest son. showing a desire to own things and an unwillingness to share what one already owns: young children are proud and possessive of their own property. 2 Grammar relating to or denoting the case of nouns and pronouns expressing possession. [from Latin possessivus, translation of Greek ktētikē (ptōsis )possessive (case ).] noun Grammar a possessive word or form. (the possessive ) the possessive case. DERIVATIVES pos ses sive ly adverb, pos ses sive ness noun usage: 1 Form the possessive of singulars by adding ’s: Ross's, Fox's, Reese's. A few classical and foreign names are traditional exceptions to this rule, for example, Jesus and Euripides, which take an apostrophe only. 2 Form the possessive of plurals by adding an apostrophe to the plural form: the Rosses ’ house, the Perezes ’ car. See also usage at apostrophe 1 , its, and plural .

 

possessive determiner

pos ¦ses |sive de ¦ter |miner noun Grammar a determiner indicating possession, for example my, your, her, their .

 

possessive pronoun

pos ses sive pro noun noun Grammar a pronoun indicating possession, for example mine, yours, hers, theirs .

 

possessor

pos ses sor |pəˈzesər pəˈzɛsər | noun a person who owns something or has a particular quality: his father was the possessor of a considerable fortune. Law a person who takes, occupies, or holds something without necessarily having ownership, or as distinguished from the owner. DERIVATIVES pos ses so ry adjective

 

Oxford Dictionary

possess

pos |sess |pəˈzɛs | verb [ with obj. ] 1 have as belonging to one; own: I do not possess a television set. Law have possession of as distinct from ownership: a two-year suspended sentence for possessing cocaine. have as an ability, quality, or characteristic: he did not possess a sense of humour | (be possessed of ) : a fading blonde possessed of a powerful soprano voice. (possess oneself of ) archaic take for one's own. 2 (of a demon or spirit, especially an evil one ) have complete power over (someone ) and be manifested through their speech or actions: she was possessed by the Devil. (of an emotion, idea, etc. ) dominate the mind of: I was possessed by a desire to tell her everything. 3 literary (of a man ) have sexual intercourse with. 4 archaic maintain (oneself or one's mind or soul ) in a state of patience or quiet: I tried to possess my soul in patience. [often with biblical allusion to Luke 21:19, the proper sense (‘gain your souls ’) being misunderstood. ] PHRASES what possessed you? used to express surprise at an action regarded as extremely unwise: what possessed you to come here? ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French possesser, from Latin possess- occupied, held , from the verb possidere, from potis able, capable + sedere sit .

 

possessed

pos |sessed |pəˈzɛst | adjective (of a person ) completely controlled by an evil spirit: she ran like a possessed person. PHRASES like a man (or woman ) possessed in a frenzy; madly: the striker charged down on goal like a man possessed.

 

possession

pos ¦ses |sion |pəˈzɛʃ (ə )n | noun 1 [ mass noun ] the state of having, owning, or controlling something: she had taken possession of the sofa | the book came into my possession | he remains in full possession of his sanity. Law visible power or control over something, as distinct from lawful ownership; holding or occupancy as distinct from ownership: the landlord wishes to gain possession of the accommodation. informal the state of possessing an illegal drug: they're charged with possession. (in soccer, rugby, and other ball games ) temporary control of the ball by a player or team: the ball hit a defender and Brown's quick reaction put him in possession . 2 (usu. possessions ) something that is owned or possessed: I had no money or possessions | that photograph was Bert's most precious possession. a territory or country controlled or governed by another: France's former colonial possessions. 3 [ mass noun ] the state of being controlled by a demon or spirit: they said prayers to protect the people inside the hall from demonic possession. the state of being completely dominated by an idea or emotion: fear took possession of my soul. DERIVATIVES possessionless adjective ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French, from Latin possessio (n- ), from the verb possidere (see possess ).

 

possession order

pos ¦ses |sion order noun chiefly Brit. an order made by a court directing that possession of a property be given to the owner or other claimant.

 

possessive

pos ¦ses |sive |pəˈzɛsɪv | adjective 1 demanding someone's total attention and love: has he become jealous or possessive? | he placed a firm, possessive hand on her elbow. showing an unwillingness to share one's possessions: young children are proud and possessive of their own property. 2 Grammar relating to or denoting the case of nouns and pronouns expressing possession. noun Grammar a possessive word or form. (the possessive ) the possessive case. DERIVATIVES possessively adverb, possessiveness noun

 

possessive determiner

pos ¦ses |sive de ¦ter |miner noun Grammar a determiner indicating possession, for example my, your, her, their .

 

possessive pronoun

pos ¦ses |sive pro |noun noun Grammar a pronoun indicating possession, for example mine, yours, hers, theirs .

 

possessor

pos |ses ¦sor |pəˈzɛsə (r )| noun a person who owns something or has a particular quality: his father was the possessor of a considerable fortune. Law a person who takes, occupies, or holds something without necessarily having ownership, or as distinguished from the owner. DERIVATIVES possessory adjective

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

possess

possess verb 1 the only hat she possessed: own, have (to one's name ), hold. 2 he does not possess a sense of humor: have, be blessed with, be endowed with; enjoy, boast. 3 a supernatural force possessed him: take control of, take over, control, dominate, influence; bewitch, enchant, enthrall. 4 she was possessed by a need to talk to him: obsess, haunt, preoccupy, consume; eat someone up, prey on someone's mind.

 

possessed

possessed adjective he was like a man possessed: mad, demented, insane, crazed, berserk, out of one's mind; bewitched, enchanted, haunted, under a spell.

 

possession

possession noun 1 the estate came into their possession: ownership, control, hands, keeping, care, custody, charge, hold, title, guardianship. 2 her possession of the premises: occupancy, occupation, tenure, holding, tenancy. 3 (possessions ) she packed her possessions: belongings, things, property, (worldly ) goods, (personal ) effects, assets, chattels, movables, valuables; stuff, bits and pieces; luggage, baggage; informal gear, junk. 4 colonial possessions: colony, dependency, territory, holding, protectorate. PHRASES take possession of they were under orders to take possession of the house and all of its contents: seize, appropriate, impound, expropriate, sequestrate, sequester, confiscate; take, get, acquire, obtain, procure, possess oneself of, get hold of, get one's hands on; capture, commandeer, requisition; Law distrain; informal get one's mitts on.

 

possessive

possessive adjective 1 he was very possessive: proprietorial, overprotective, controlling, dominating, jealous, clingy. 2 kids are possessive of their own property: covetous, selfish, unwilling to share; grasping, greedy, acquisitive, grabby.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

possess

possess verb 1 the hat was the only one she possessed: own, have, be the owner of, have in one's possession, be in possession of, be the possessor of, have to one's name, hold. 2 he did not possess a sense of humour: have, be blessed with, be endowed with, be gifted with, be possessed of, be born with; enjoy, boast, benefit from; archaic participate of. 3 it was almost as though some supernatural force had possessed him: take control of, have power over, take over, have mastery over, cast a spell over, bewitch, enchant, enthral, control, dominate, influence; madden, drive mad; rare bedevil. 4 she was possessed by a burning need to talk to him: obsess, dominate, haunt, preoccupy, consume; eat someone up, prey on someone's mind, become an obsession with, be uppermost in someone's mind, take control of. PHRASES possess oneself of he possessed himself of a loaded shotgun: acquire, obtain, get, get hold of, procure, secure, take, seize, take /gain possession of, get one's hands on; informal get one's mitts on.

 

possessed

possessed adjective he ran towards the door like a man possessed: mad, demented, insane, crazed, maddened, berserk, out of one's mind; bewitched, enchanted, under a spell, obsessed, haunted; rare bedevilled.

 

possession

possession noun 1 the estate came into the possession of the Heslerton family: ownership, proprietorship, control, hands, keeping, care, custody, charge, hold, title, guardianship. 2 an attempt to drive the tenant out of her possession of the premises: occupancy, tenure, occupation, holding, tenancy. 3 that photograph was Bert's most precious possession: asset, thing, article, item owned, chattel. 4 (possessions ) he loaded Francesca and all her possessions into his car: belongings, things, property, worldly goods, goods, personal effects, effects, stuff, assets, accoutrements, paraphernalia, impedimenta, bits and pieces, luggage, baggage, bags and baggage, chattels, movables, valuables; Law goods and chattels; informal gear, junk, dunnage, traps; Brit. informal clobber; S. African informal trek; vulgar slang shit, crap. 5 France's former colonial possessions: colony, dependency, territory, holding, dominion, protectorate. PHRASES take possession of seize, appropriate, impound, expropriate, sequestrate, sequester, confiscate; take, get, acquire, obtain, secure, procure, possess oneself of, get hold of, get one's hands on, help oneself to; occupy, conquer, capture, commandeer, requisition; Law distrain, attach, disseize; Scottish Law poind; informal get one's mitts on.

 

possessive

possessive adjective 1 he was very possessive he wanted me to spend every minute with him: proprietorial, overprotective, clinging, controlling, dominating, jealous. 2 one of those possessive women who wants to grab everything within reach: grasping, greedy, acquisitive, covetous, selfish; N. Amer. informal grabby.

 

Duden Dictionary

possessiv

pos ses siv Adjektiv |p o ssessiv auch …ˈsiːf |lateinisch possessivus, zu: possidere (2. Partizip: possessum ) = besitzen 1 Sprachwissenschaft besitzanzeigend 2 englisch possesive = besitzergreifend bildungssprachlich in Besitz nehmend er ist possessiv und eifersüchtig

 

Possessiv

Pos ses siv Substantiv, Neutrum Sprachwissenschaft , das Possessivum ; Possessivpronomen |P o ssessiv auch …ˈsiːf |besitzanzeigendes Fürwort z. B. mein, dein

 

Possessiva

Pos ses si va |Possess i va |Plural von Possessivum

 

Possessivkompositum

Pos ses siv kom po si tum Substantiv, Neutrum , das |P o ssessivkompositum auch …ˈsiːf …|das Possessivkompositum; Genitiv: des Possessivkompositums, Plural: die Possessivkomposita und Possessivkompositen Bahuwrihi

 

Possessivpronomen

Pos ses siv pro no men Substantiv, Neutrum Sprachwissenschaft , das Possessiv |P o ssessivpronomen auch …ˈsiːf …|besitzanzeigendes Fürwort z. B. mein, dein

 

Possessivum

Pos ses si vum Substantiv, Neutrum Sprachwissenschaft , das Possessiv |Possess i vum |das Possessivum; Genitiv: des Possessivums, Plural: die Possessiva besitzanzeigendes Fürwort z. B. mein, dein

 

possessorisch

pos ses so risch Adjektiv Rechtswissenschaft |possess o risch |lateinisch den Besitz betreffend

 

French Dictionary

possesseur

possesseur n. m. nom masculin Personne qui possède (un bien ). SYNONYME propriétaire . Note Technique Ce nom n ’a pas de forme féminine.

 

possessif

possessif , ive adj. et n. m. adjectif et nom masculin Qui éprouve un désir de domination affective. : Il est trop possessif.

 

possession

possession n. f. nom féminin 1 Le fait d ’avoir un bien. : La possession d ’une fortune. Les Fontaine sont entrés en possession de leur voilier. 2 Le bien possédé. : Ce voilier est la possession des Fontaine. LOCUTIONS Être en la possession de. Appartenir à. : Ce tableau est en la possession d ’un collectionneur. Prendre possession de. S ’installer dans un lieu, devenir propriétaire. : Ils ont pris possession de leur nouvelle maison, de leur voilier. Être en possession de. Posséder. : Un collectionneur est en possession du tableau.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

possess

pos sess /pəzés /〖語源は 「力を持って居座る 」〗動詞 es /-ɪz /; ed /-t /; ing (!進行形にしない; be ~edなど分詞形容詞用法については possessed ) 他動詞 1 かたく 〈人が 〉〈貴重 [非合法 ]な物など 〉を所有している ; 所蔵している ; 〈人 物が 〉〈能力 性質 を持っている, 備えている ; 〘法 〙所持する (!受け身にしない ) (have 他動詞 1 類義 )possess nuclear weapons 核兵器を所有している possess the ability to grow 成長する力を持っている 2 a. ⦅文 ⦆感情 考えが 〉〈人 〉を支配している ; 〈悪魔などが 〉〈人 〉にとりついている He felt an uncontrollable rage possessed him .彼は自分の中でどうしようもない怒りが収まらないのを感じた .b. ⦅話 ⦆ A to do (とりついて )A 〈人 〉に …させる (!疑問文 否定文で ) What (on earth ) [Whatever ] possessed you to throw our money away? いったいなぜ私たちのお金を捨ててしまったのか .3 ⦅主に文 ⦆〈女 〉と肉体関係を持つ .4 かたく «…に » 自分 保つ «in » .

 

possessed

pos s ssed /-t /形容詞 1 be 〈人が 〉悪霊 感情などに 】とりつかれて, 支配されて «by, with » .2 ⦅文 ⦆be of A 〗〈人が 〉A 〈能力, 性質 〉を持っている .3 落ち着いた, 冷静な (self-possessed ).like A poss ssed ⦅文 ⦆A 〈人 〉が全力で ; 狂ったように (!Aはa man, a woman, someoneなど ) .

 

possession

pos ses sion /pəzéʃ (ə )n /possess 名詞 s /-z /1 U かたく 所有 , 所持 , 保有 ; 所蔵 ; 入手 ; 〘法 〙占有 be charged with possession of marijuana マリファナ所持で告発される Mr. Jones is in possession of the land.The land is in the possession of Mr. Jones [in Mr. Jones' possession ].その土地はジョーンズ氏が所有している The property came into his possession lawfully.He came into the possession of the property lawfully .その物品は法的に彼の所有物になった Possession is nine tenths [points, parts ] of the law .ことわざ 現実の占有は九分の勝ち目 .2 C 通例 s 〗(家 身の回りの )所有物 , 所持品 ; 財産 (!個人の能力など抽象的な物も含む ) one's personal possessions 個人の所有物 .3 C かたく 通例 s 〗領地 , 属領 the British possessions in Africa アフリカにおける英国の領地 .4 U (球技でのボールの )支配 .5 U (悪魔などに )とりつかれた状態 .take possession 1 かたく «…の » 所有者となる «of » .2 ⦅文 ⦆感情 悪魔などが 〉【人を 】支配する , 【人に 】とりつく «of » .3 (球技で )ボールの支配権を握る .

 

possessive

pos ses sive /pəzésɪv /形容詞 1 〈人が 〉 «…について » 独占 [所有 ]欲の強い «of , about » ; (自分のものを取られないようにと )用心した ; 嫉妬 しっ と )深い .2 文法 所有を示す, 所有格の .名詞 C 文法 所有格 .~̀ djective 文法 所有形容詞 .~̀ c se 文法 所有格 .~̀ pr noun 文法 所有代名詞 .

 

possessor

pos ses sor /pəzésə r /名詞 C かたく /おどけて ⦆所有主, 占有者 .