marque

noun

A model or brand of a manufactured product, especially an automobile.

noun

Seizure.

noun

Originally, a commission granted by the supreme authority of a state to a subject, empowering him to enter an enemy’s territory and capture the goods or persons of the enemy in return for goods or persons taken by him.

noun

In present usage, a license or extraordinary commission granted by a sovereign or the supreme power of a state to its citizens to make reprisals at sea on the subjects of another, under pretense of indemnification for injuries received—that is, a license to engage in privateering. Letters of marque were abolished among European nations by the treaty of Paris of 1856. The United States declined to accede to this agreement, but proposed that all innocent private property at sea be exempt from seizure by public armed vessels in time of war.

noun

Hence— A private vessel commissioned to attack and capture the vessels of an enemy; a privateer.

noun

A license to pass the limits of a jurisdiction, or boundary of a country, for the purpose of making reprisals.

noun

a license or extraordinary commission granted by a government to a private person to fit out a privateer or armed ship to cruise at sea and make prize of the enemy’s ships and merchandise. The ship so commissioned is sometimes called a letter of marque.

noun

A license to pass the limits of a jurisdiction, or boundary of a country, for the purpose of making reprisals; a letter of marque

noun

A brand of a manufactured product, especially a model of motor car