CESSION


Meaning of CESSION in English

ˈseshən noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French, from Latin cession-, cessio, from cessus, past participle of cedere to withdraw, yield + -ion-, -io -ion — more at cede

1. : a yielding (as of property or territory or rights) to another : act of ceding : concession

no territorial cessions in the west were envisaged — Vera M. Dean

his cession to her of every right of judgment in the home — Mary Austin

2. obsolete : a yielding to physical or moral force, persuasion, or temptation : compliance

they shall prevail by cession , by sweetness and counsel — Jeremy Taylor

3. civil law : an assignment to another of the rights of a creditor or of ownership of a right of action or a claim

4. ecclesiastical law : the vacating of a benefice by becoming a bishop or by accepting another without proper dispensation

5. international law : a transfer usually evidenced by a treaty of sovereignty over territory by one sovereign state to another apparently willing to accept it

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.