DEODAND


Meaning of DEODAND in English

ˈdēəˌdand noun

( -s )

Etymology: Anglo-French deodande, from Medieval Latin deodandum, from Latin Deo dandum that must be given to God

: a thing that by English law before 1846 was forfeited to the crown and thence to pious uses because it had been the immediate cause of the death of a person

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