0 to take temporary possession of someone's property until they have paid money that is owed or until they have obeyed a court order --
1 to keep people, especially a jury, together in a place so that they cannot be influenced by other people, by newspaper reports, etc. --
2 to separate and store a harmful substance such as carbon dioxide in a way that keeps it safe: --
3 to keep the people on a jury (= group deciding a legal case) separate from everyone else, even from their families, while deciding a case: --
4 to take temporary possession of someone's property until they have paid back the money that they borrowed in order to buy it, or until they have obeyed a court order: --
5 to keep a jury together in a place so that they cannot discuss the case with other people or see or hear news reports about it: --
Migration via the systemic route also implies that schistosomula are sequestered within the hepatic portal system by losing the ability to negotiate capillary beds, in this case the hepatic sinusoids.
Possibly, hatchling keelbacks remain inactive or sequestered until it begins to rain.
Calcium microinjection in both cases caused a local increase at the site of injection that subsided gradually as the injected calcium was sequestered.
The effect is more pronounced with molecular beacons which are sequestered into a stable hairpin loop when displaced [5].
Increases in the discount rate unambiguously decrease the amount of carbon sequestered in the soil.
In addition to revenue from agricultural output, farmers can earn money for sequestering carbon in the soil.
In either case, it may have been sequestered in the cave to mitigate or increase its power and effectiveness.
The recurrent infections of the respiratory tract were probably related to the sequestered lower lobe of the right lung.