By express enactment or by necessary implication from the context any word may be given a meaning different from or wider than that which it ordinarily bears, and this may apply to the word "sale" where it appears in a context relating to the process of compulsory acquisition of land. . ." I do not find it necessary to quote from the minority view of Lord Morton of Henryton but he did point out that the word 'sale ' for 100 years was being used in connection with transactions by which the property of A had been transferred to B, on payment of compensation to the owner but without 504 the consent of the owner and said of the question posed by Singleton L. J. that if it were put to ten persons unconnected with the company, five of them might say "No, the wagons were taken over under the Transport Act" and the other five might say,""Yes", adding, possibly, " 'but it was a compulsory sale" or " 'because they had to do it".