0 past simple and past participle of proscribe
1 (of a government or other authority) to not allow something:
However, maize, with its proscribed growing conditions, is more difficult to maintain.
These licence decisions, and decisions to modify the lists of controlled items or proscribed countries, required unanimous consent.
And no, men were no longer buried in their byres, largely because it was proscribed by the authorities.
As such, limited and carefully proscribed forms of screening may be permissible so long as the values of welfare, equality and liberty are observed.
Some, such as incendiarism, were already felonies, whilst other offences were newly proscribed.
In other words people's private actions came under public scrutiny, were often legally proscribed, and categorized on the basis of political loyalties.
These different levels of description should be prescribed for their complementarity and their individual advantages, not proscribed for their differences and respective disadvantages.
This would mean that a wide variety of affronts to sensibility could be proscribed if the taboos against the conduct were broadly held.