preëmption
English
Etymology
From (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Latin prae- (“before”) + ēmptiō (“buying”), from ēmptus, perfect passive participle of emō (“buy”).
Pronunciation
Noun
preëmption (plural preëmptions)
- Rare spelling of preemption.
- 1906, Guy Carleton Lee & Francis Newton Thorpe, The History of North America, p255
- All the foreigners who had served therein were entitled to homesteads, many lands were open to preëmption by foreigners…
- 2004, John Wesley Powell, The Arid Lands, p37
- No person can exercise the preëmption right who is already the owner of 320 acres of land.
- 2005, Mari Sandoz, Old Jules, p94
- “If you had two hundred dollars to pay on your preëmption you could borrow some.”
- 1906, Guy Carleton Lee & Francis Newton Thorpe, The History of North America, p255
Related terms
References
- “preëmption”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC., see page 1128.