释义 |
Definition of proscription in English: proscriptionnoun prə(ʊ)ˈskrɪpʃ(ə)nproʊˈskrɪpʃ(ə)n mass noun1The action of forbidding something; banning. the proscription of the party after the 1715 Rebellion Example sentencesExamples - Religious opposition to coffee drinking resulted in political proscription a number of times during the sixteenth century.
- And even if the courts were to countermand a proscription order, the damage done to the organisation during the period of proscription could be critical.
- Guilt is the operation of law, a proscription by law, upon conduct.
- Virginia would no longer suffer such state prescriptions or proscriptions of religion.
- In May 1794 the Dublin Society was included in the wave of proscription which was then afflicting most anti-government organizations.
- Historically, proscription has been a tool of political repression, not law enforcement.
- Both sets of norms rest ultimately upon a fundamental principle of proscription concerning the infliction of militarily ' unnecessary suffering '.
- The ruling also does not override state proscriptions on funding to private or religious schools.
- The offences under sections 11 to 13 are all direct consequences of proscription.
- Proscription is designed to outlaw organisations deemed a threat to national security.
- Now some of the mysterious proscriptions in chapter eleven of Leviticus become more intelligible.
- Whether done by the Attorney General or a judge proscription should not be allowed.
- The proscription against physicians talking about themselves with patients comes from several different traditions.
- There is also a proscription against any form of harassment.
- By the way, there is no requirement from the UN Security Council for a general proscription power to be enacted.
- He also suggested the government remove the entire part concerning the proscription of local organisations found to be endangering national security.
- Historically, proscription has been used for political repression.
- And for all its military ventures, justified and not, since 1945, the United States had never repudiated the charter's proscription of pre-emption.
- There are no provisions for banned passengers to see the accusatory information or contest their proscription.
Synonyms prohibition, prohibiting, forbidding, banning, ban, barring, bar, disallowing, ruling out, embargo, embargoing, vetoing, veto, making illegal, interdicting, interdict, outlawing, tabooing condemnation, denunciation, attack, criticism, censure, denigration, damning, rejection - 1.1 Condemnation or denunciation of something.
he plays a the priest whose moral proscriptions lead only to catastrophe Example sentencesExamples - Personally, I am strongly opposed to proscription in any form.
- But with it would also come the the Christian proscriptions and hence need for encryption.
- The name of Middleton was unpopular, and his proscription very naturally tempted me to peruse his writings and those of his antagonists.
- Dr. Pipa did not shun away from the traditional understanding of Isaiah 58: 13-14 and its proscription of worldly employments and recreations.
- Although I agree with none of these proscriptions, I have been obediently observing them. "
- There should, in short, never be a blanket proscription of expression.
- Deep down inside, staying alive (a biological imperative) took precedence over social proscriptions against cannibalism.
- The practice of dissection had stopped altogether, chiefly due to contemporaneous religious proscriptions.
- His work encodes and decodes physical and cultural landscapes in ways that challenge the assumptions, proscriptions, and prohibitions built into human environments.
- His essential concern is that rampant materialism, unhindered by any generally accepted ethical proscription, will degrade the natural environment.
- But that description of my mission is not a proscription for your article.
- But its proscriptions make plain the recklessness that characterises imperialist policy.
- With respect, I think you are drawing a far too narrow proscription.
- But this push is neither a proscription or a requirement for the latter to dominate economic development, or even the socialization process itself.
- However, what would her proscription there have been?
- What's with the proscription on frying in the brownstone, anyway?
- This is both a trite platitude and a profound proscription.
- Oblivious to carb counts, I ended up following the main proscription of popular low-carb diets: no refined carbohydrate foods.
- But these stories contain much more than moral visions and proscriptions.
- Many Islamic states for reasons of religious proscription have no such debate.
Definition of proscription in US English: proscriptionnounprōˈskripSH(ə)nproʊˈskrɪpʃ(ə)n 1The action of forbidding something; banning. the proscription of the party after the 1715 Rebellion Example sentencesExamples - Guilt is the operation of law, a proscription by law, upon conduct.
- There are no provisions for banned passengers to see the accusatory information or contest their proscription.
- Whether done by the Attorney General or a judge proscription should not be allowed.
- Proscription is designed to outlaw organisations deemed a threat to national security.
- Virginia would no longer suffer such state prescriptions or proscriptions of religion.
- Now some of the mysterious proscriptions in chapter eleven of Leviticus become more intelligible.
- Historically, proscription has been used for political repression.
- He also suggested the government remove the entire part concerning the proscription of local organisations found to be endangering national security.
- Religious opposition to coffee drinking resulted in political proscription a number of times during the sixteenth century.
- The ruling also does not override state proscriptions on funding to private or religious schools.
- By the way, there is no requirement from the UN Security Council for a general proscription power to be enacted.
- And for all its military ventures, justified and not, since 1945, the United States had never repudiated the charter's proscription of pre-emption.
- There is also a proscription against any form of harassment.
- Historically, proscription has been a tool of political repression, not law enforcement.
- The proscription against physicians talking about themselves with patients comes from several different traditions.
- Both sets of norms rest ultimately upon a fundamental principle of proscription concerning the infliction of militarily ' unnecessary suffering '.
- The offences under sections 11 to 13 are all direct consequences of proscription.
- In May 1794 the Dublin Society was included in the wave of proscription which was then afflicting most anti-government organizations.
- And even if the courts were to countermand a proscription order, the damage done to the organisation during the period of proscription could be critical.
Synonyms prohibition, prohibiting, forbidding, banning, ban, barring, bar, disallowing, ruling out, embargo, embargoing, vetoing, veto, making illegal, interdicting, interdict, outlawing, tabooing condemnation, denunciation, attack, criticism, censure, denigration, damning, rejection - 1.1 Condemnation or denunciation of something.
Example sentencesExamples - Personally, I am strongly opposed to proscription in any form.
- His essential concern is that rampant materialism, unhindered by any generally accepted ethical proscription, will degrade the natural environment.
- The practice of dissection had stopped altogether, chiefly due to contemporaneous religious proscriptions.
- But its proscriptions make plain the recklessness that characterises imperialist policy.
- The name of Middleton was unpopular, and his proscription very naturally tempted me to peruse his writings and those of his antagonists.
- What's with the proscription on frying in the brownstone, anyway?
- Deep down inside, staying alive (a biological imperative) took precedence over social proscriptions against cannibalism.
- However, what would her proscription there have been?
- Although I agree with none of these proscriptions, I have been obediently observing them. "
- Dr. Pipa did not shun away from the traditional understanding of Isaiah 58: 13-14 and its proscription of worldly employments and recreations.
- But that description of my mission is not a proscription for your article.
- But this push is neither a proscription or a requirement for the latter to dominate economic development, or even the socialization process itself.
- Many Islamic states for reasons of religious proscription have no such debate.
- This is both a trite platitude and a profound proscription.
- There should, in short, never be a blanket proscription of expression.
- His work encodes and decodes physical and cultural landscapes in ways that challenge the assumptions, proscriptions, and prohibitions built into human environments.
- With respect, I think you are drawing a far too narrow proscription.
- But with it would also come the the Christian proscriptions and hence need for encryption.
- Oblivious to carb counts, I ended up following the main proscription of popular low-carb diets: no refined carbohydrate foods.
- But these stories contain much more than moral visions and proscriptions.
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