Requisition in a sentence as a noun

Call up the recruiter and requisition a J6-252: Programmer, seasoned 5 years, with degree from MIT.

Today I'd probably just requisition a copy of a Windows SSH server and be done with the sorry mess.

You may also requisition events for this purpose and allow for them to be plumbed separately, if that's useful.

The premises of the mission, their furnishings and other property thereon and the means of transport of the mission shall be immune from search, requisition, attachment or execution.

But every day that an impossible job requisition remains unfilled, the employment system vendors make more money while companies keep advertising for the perfect hires."...

Requisition in a sentence as a verb

The BOM is an all encompassing contract that should cover not only the parts, specs, and design process but also the routings, requisition/sourcing schedule, equipment/change-parts, and internal lead-times.

Personal property is subject to compulsory purchase all the time for municipal infrastructure and in times of emergency is subject to state requisition without compensation.

My apologies for changing the subject, but do you have any evidence at all that Google has ever "voluntarily hand[ed] over [anyone's] e-mails", or was that just a random slur?Google's stated policy is to fight government requisition of data, but ultimately to comply with the law.

At the same time as they surveyed the satellite data, Mr. Slippery and Erythrina swept through these bureaucratic communications, looking carefully but with flickering speed at every requisition for toilet paper, every "declaration" of secret war, every travel voucher, everyone of the trillions of pieces of "'paper" that made it possible for the machinery of state to creak forward.

Requisition definitions

noun

the act of requiring; an authoritative request or demand, especially by a military or public authority that takes something over (usually temporarily) for military or public use

noun

an official form on which a request in made; "first you have to fill out the requisition"

noun

seizing property that belongs to someone else and holding it until profits pay the demand for which it was seized

See also: sequestration

verb

make a formal request for official services

verb

demand and take for use or service, especially by military or public authority for public service