Interdicting [verb]
Definition of Interdicting:
destroy
Synonyms of Interdicting:
Opposite/Antonyms of Interdicting:
Sentence/Example of Interdicting:
Excommunications were again hurled at Bruce and his bishops, and Scotland was laid under ecclesiastical interdict.
The Interdict included you with Mordred; it is not to be removed while you remain alive.
Mordred attacked; the Bishop of Canterbury dropped down on him with the Interdict.
We imagined we had educated it out of them; they thought so, too; the Interdict woke them up like a thunderclap!
Is reason so largely developed in the great mass of men that the priests should interdict its use as dangerous?
If you want to make a man a bad companion, interdict altogether the topic that happens to interest him.
Yet it would appear that these various bulls threatening an interdict did not receive a welcome from any quarter.
Now he avoided vegetables as poison—and now he submitted with a sigh to the doctor's interdict of his cigar.
After his death, however, the interdict was not removed from Germany, and the resistance of Louis and his theologians continued.
The sixty-four Reformers were then promptly driven into jail, and their property placed under an interdict.