0 past simple and past participle of proscribe
1 (of a government or other authority) to not allow something:
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.
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.
British colonial officials gathered data on external trade and not internal manufactures, which were often proscribed.
For practical reasons, its prohibitions are framed in general terms, ruling out both valuable and valueless instances of a proscribed activity.
Links with clergymen employed by the convent or friars from a nearby male community, although proscribed, provided female religious with an obvious source of company.
This is asymmetric conflict with the additional condition of is proscribed.
This would mean that a wide variety of affronts to sensibility could be proscribed if the taboos against the conduct were broadly held.