0 past simple and past participle of annex
1 to take possession of an area of land or a country, usually by force or without permission:
The tract in question had recently been annexed into the city and was surrounded on all sides by residential areas.
The new barrio coincided with the territory annexed to the town in 1614.
The children were tested individually in a separate room annexed to the classroom, in a quiet atmosphere.
Many of those travelling east came from parts of the country that had only recently been annexed.
They report that the civilian population of the annexed province has outrageously betrayed them.
The first one, defining the ignitor, the second one, defining the volume annexed to the ignitor.
However, a canoe was spotted, 'annexed,' and 'with rather less than an inch of freeboard' they set off in a southerly direction.
Not only could none of the capitals declare independence, but it would be difficult for a rival confederation to have annexed them.