proscriber

English

Etymology

From proscribe +‎ -er.

Noun

proscriber (plural proscribers)

  1. One who, or that which, proscribes, denounces, or prohibits.
    • 1848, Alphonse de Lamartine, History of the Girondists: Or, Personal Memoirs of the Patriots of the French Revolution, volume 3:
      In a period of quiet, he had acquired the name of a man of worth; in darker days, he left the renown of a pitiless proscriber.
    • 1888, “The Four Presidents of the French Republic”, in The American Magazine, volume 25, page 156:
      “In principle,” he declared, “proscription is not only a crime, but a fault; history is full of instances, showing how proscribers have in their turn been forced into the ranks of the proscribed."
    • 2003, Betsy Blair, The Memory of All that: Love and Politics in New York, Hollywood, and Paris:
      I made no connection to the fact that the other proscribers of books were Hitler and the Catholic Church.

Interlingua

Verb

proscriber

  1. to proscribe

Conjugation

    Conjugation of proscriber
infinitive proscriber
participle present perfect
proscribente proscribiteproscripte
active simple perfect
present proscribe ha proscribite
past proscribeva habeva proscribite
future proscribera habera proscribite
conditional proscriberea haberea proscribite
imperative proscribe
passive simple perfect
present es proscribite ha essite proscribite
past esseva proscribite habeva essite proscribite
future essera proscribite habera essite proscribite
conditional esserea proscribite haberea essite proscribite
imperative sia proscribite