PROSCRIBE vs INTERDICT: NOUN
- N/A
- A court order prohibiting a party from doing a certain activity
- An ecclesiastical censure by the Roman Catholic Church withdrawing certain sacraments and Christian burial from a person or all persons in a particular district
- An authoritative prohibition, especially by court order.
- An ecclesiastical censure that bars an individual, members of a given group, or inhabitants of a given district from participation in most sacraments.
- In law, an incompetent; one judicially declared to be incapable of earing for his person or estate. See interdiction, 2.
- An official or authoritative prohibition; a prohibitory order or decree.
- In Roman law, an adjudication, by a solemn ordinance issued by the pretor, in his capacity of governing magistrate, for the purpose of quieting a controversy, usually as to peaceable possession, between private parties. ;
- In the Roman Catholic Church, an ecclesiastical sentence which forbids the right of Christian burial, the use of the sacraments, and the enjoyment of public worship, or the exercise of ecclesiastical functions.
- In Scots law, an injunction. See suspension.
- A prohibitory order or decree; a prohibition.
- A prohibition of the pope, by which the clergy or laymen are restrained from performing, or from attending, divine service, or from administering the offices or enjoying the privileges of the church.
- An order of the court of session, having the like purpose and effect with a writ of injunction out of chancery in England and America.
- A papal decree prohibiting the administration of the sacraments from a political entity under the power of a single person (e.g., a king or an oligarchy with similar powers). Exteme unction/Anointing of the sick are excepted.
PROSCRIBE vs INTERDICT: VERB
- To forbid or prohibit.
- To denounce.
- To banish or exclude.
- Command against
- Destroy by firepower, such as an enemy's line of communication
- Command against
PROSCRIBE vs INTERDICT: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To publish the name of (a person) as outlawed.
- To banish or outlaw (a person).
- To denounce or condemn.
- To denounce and condemn; to interdict; to prohibit.
- To doom to destruction; to put out of the protection of law; to outlaw; to exile.
- To prohibit; forbid: : forbid.
- To prohibit (an action or thing) or forbid (someone) to do something, especially by legal or ecclesiastical order.
- To cut or destroy (a line of communication) by firepower so as to halt an enemy's advance.
- To confront and halt the activities, advance, or entry of.
- To forbid; to prohibit or debar.
- To lay under an interdict; to cut off from the enjoyment of religious privileges, as a city, a church, an individual.
PROSCRIBE vs INTERDICT: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To forbid.
- Synonyms To doom.
- To denounce and condemn as dangerous; reject utterly; interdict; prohibit.
- To put out of the protection of the law; banish; outlaw; exile.
- To publish the name of, as condemned to death and liable to confiscation of property.
- To declare authoritatively against, as the use or doing of something; debar by forbidding; prohibit peremptorily.
- To prohibit from some action-or proceeding; restrain by prohibitory injunction; estop; preclude.
- Synonyms Prohibit, etc. See forbid.
- Specifically Eccles., to cut off from communion with a church; debar from ecclesiastical functions or privileges.
PROSCRIBE vs INTERDICT: RELATED WORDS
- Derogate, Criminalize, Injunct, Restrain, Exclude, Ban, Prohibiting, Prohibits, Prohibition, Outlaw, Interdict, Veto, Disallow, Prohibit, Forbid
- Block, Punish, Banning, Repress, Ban, Suppress, Prevent, Disrupt, Stop, Intercept, Forbid, Prohibit, Disallow, Veto, Proscribe
PROSCRIBE vs INTERDICT: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Contravene, Derogate, Criminalize, Restrain, Exclude, Ban, Prohibiting, Prohibits, Prohibition, Outlaw, Interdict, Veto, Disallow, Prohibit, Forbid
- Counteract, Debar, Block, Punish, Ban, Suppress, Prevent, Disrupt, Stop, Intercept, Forbid, Prohibit, Disallow, Veto, Proscribe
PROSCRIBE vs INTERDICT: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- It is not equally easy to vindicate them when they universally proscribe sectaries.
- President may proscribe GAO access to certain foreign intelligence and counterintelligence operations.
- Most Germanic languages including English proscribe against the use of double negatives.
- Title VII does not proscribe harassment simply because of sexual orientation.
- Justice Sachs, assumed that the South African Constitution does proscribe establishment.
- Octavius defray flatly as equable Walker proscribe her gymkhana signifying balmily.
- All messages in this country), cause anlage to proscribe?.
- Doherty by itsfailure to proscribe the crime of murder.
- However, these treatments neither prescribe nor proscribe dialectics.
- Framers intended to proscribe inhumane methods of punishment.
- Our layered inspectional process is geared to interdict such attempts.
- Jurisprudence of Catholic canon law envisages are excommunication, interdict, suspension.
- The Coast Guard will continue to interdict migrants at sea.
- However, few people know how to obtain an interdict.
- Court proceeded to consider the requirements of an interdict.
- Doctors launch interdict to access ivermectin for themselves and.
- Security on arrest, attachment or interdict ex parte.
- England and Wales or an interdict in Scotland.
- TIE fighters, interdict bombers, and assault capital ships.
- It is more difficult to enforce a mandatory interdict than to enforce a prohibitory interdict.
PROSCRIBE vs INTERDICT: QUESTIONS
- Does James 4 proscribe the use of first person in Plautdietsch?
- Should the power to proscribe an organisation be vested in individuals?
- Does the vindictiveness-as-vengeance standard proscribe?
- What is automatic interdict and how is it incurred?
- Why was the interdict an effective political weapon for Pope Innocent III?
- What happens if the opponent fails to obtain a permanent interdict?
- How does a court decide whether to grant an interim interdict?
- Can a final interdict be refused because the harm ceased?
- Can You interdict a disciplinary hearing that is pending?
- What happens to the church during a local interdict?
- Can a court recall an interim interdict in Scotland?