Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Deprive

Deprive , transitive verb

[Late Latin deprivare, deprivatium, to divest of office; Latin de- + privare to bereave, deprive: compare Old French depriver. See Private.]

1.
To take away; to put an end; to destroy. [Obsolete]
'Tis honor to deprive dishonored life. — Shakespeare
2.
To dispossess; to bereave; to divest; to hinder from possessing; to debar; to shut out from; -- with a remoter object, usually preceded by of.
God hath deprived her of wisdom. — Job xxxix. 17
It was seldom that anger deprived him of power over himself. — Macaulay
3.
To divest of office; to depose; to dispossess of dignity, especially ecclesiastical.
A minister deprived for inconformity. — Bacon