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disinvest
verb
dis·in·vest
(ˌ)dis-in-ˈvest
disinvested; disinvesting; disinvests
: to reduce or eliminate capital investment (as in an industry or area)
Examples of disinvest in a Sentence
Several companies have disinvested from the country to protest its human rights policies.
Recent Examples on the Web
To dig the country out of dire financial straits, Cameron’s government decided to disinvest in social services like the national health service (NHS), education, and transit, particularly the railways.
—Ellen Ioanes, Vox, 5 July 2024
The outages have reignited calls from frustrated Puerto Ricans to oust the American private companies that recently took over power generation and distribution after Hurricane Maria devastated the island’s already fragile and disinvested electrical grid in 2017.
—Nicole Acevedo, NBC News, 14 June 2024
For decades, communities like Corona, Elmhurst and Jackson Heights have been deliberately disinvested in by our city, leaving predominantly immigrant families to survive with little to no opportunities for growth.
—Donovan Richards, New York Daily News, 12 June 2024
The university divested from tobacco in 2000 and disinvested from fossil fuels in 2021.
—Niraj Warikoo, Detroit Free Press, 4 May 2024
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Word History
First Known Use
1945, in the meaning defined above
Dictionary Entries Near disinvest
Cite this Entry
“Disinvest.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/disinvest. Accessed 24 Nov. 2024.
Legal Definition
disinvest
intransitive verb
dis·in·vest
ˌdis-ᵊn-ˈvest
1
: to reduce or eliminate capital investment (as in an industry or area)
2
: to give up an investment
insiders force the noncontrolling shareholders to…disinvest—R. C. Clark
: to cause to give up an investment
no one is being…disinvested or cashed out—R. C. Clark
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