proscribe Meaning & Definition

  • En [ prəʊˈskraɪb]
  • Us [ proʊˈskraɪb]

Meaning of proscribe In English

More Definitions of proscribe

Examples of proscribe

  • This proscribes competition for "ownership" of the patient and demands an egalitarian sharing of expertise, including the expertise of ethical thinking.

  • Under authoritarianism, independent political activity by labour unions was strictly proscribed in the name of national security.

  • From this standpoint, whatever might interfere with meaning is necessarily proscribed, beginning with the reintroduction of vocal materiality and the jouissance connected to it.

  • When it proscribes particular forms of discourse, deliberative democratic theory actually adds to these heavy demands on movements.

  • Industry has asked consumers by way of privacy advocates to specify those data handling practices that they wish to proscribe.

  • There are not, in quantum space, any dimensionless points to act as possible departure points for zero-width trajectories: they are proscribed by the theory.

  • This paper looks at how libraries function in terms of the access to literature they enable and proscribe.

  • British colonial officials gathered data on external trade and not internal manufactures, which were often proscribed.

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