Definify.com
Webster 1828 Edition
Impound
IMPOUND'
,Verb.
T.
1.
To put, shut or confine in a pound or close pen; as, to impound unruly or stray horses, cattle, &c.2.
To confine; to restrain within limits.Definition 2024
impound
impound
English
Verb
impound (third-person singular simple present impounds, present participle impounding, simple past and past participle impounded)
- (transitive) To shut up or place in an enclosure called a pound.
- His car got impounded after he'd parked illegally.
- (transitive) To hold back, as water by a dam.
- (transitive, law) To hold in the custody of a court or its delegate.
- to impound stray cattle; to impound a document for safe keeping.
- (transitive, law, banking) To collect and hold (funds) for payment of property taxes and insurance on property in which one has a security interest.
Translations
to shut up or place in an inclosure called a pound
to hold in the custody of a court or its delegate
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Noun
impound (plural impounds)
- A place in which things are impounded.
- 1997, Edward Bunker, Dog Eat Dog, page 36:
- "You're gonna drive me to the impound so I can get my car?"
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- A state of being impounded.
- 2010, Neal Locke, No Plan, page 161:
- I already checked that out, and Keller has never called to get it out of impound.
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- That which has been impounded.
- 2002, James E. Wollrab, Malfeasance, page 190:
- He handed the keys to the woman and pointed toward the corner of the lot where the impounds were stored.
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- (law, banking) Amounts collected from a debtor and held by one with a security interest in property for payment of property taxes and insurance.