Online Google Dictionary

interdict 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈintərˌdikt/,
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interdicts, plural;
  1. Prohibit or forbid (something)
    • - society will never interdict sex
  2. Prohibit someone from (doing something)
    • - I have not been interdicted from consuming or holding alcoholic beverages
  3. Intercept and prevent the movement of (a prohibited commodity or person)
    • - the police established roadblocks throughout the country for interdicting drugs
  4. Impede (an enemy force), esp. by aerial bombing of lines of communication or supply

Noun
  1. An authoritative prohibition
    • - an interdict against marriage of those of close kin
  2. (in the Roman Catholic Church) A sentence barring a person, or esp. a place, from ecclesiastical functions and privileges
    • - a papal interdict

  1. an ecclesiastical censure by the Roman Catholic Church withdrawing certain sacraments and Christian burial from a person or all persons in a particular district
  2. destroy by firepower, such as an enemy's line of communication
  3. a court order prohibiting a party from doing a certain activity
  4. forbid: command against; "I forbid you to call me late at night"; "Mother vetoed the trip to the chocolate store"; "Dad nixed our plans"
  5. (interdiction) authoritative prohibition
  6. In the Roman Catholic Church, the term interdict usually refers to an ecclesiastical penalty. Interdicts may be real, local or personal. A personal interdict penalizes named persons. ...
  7. (Interdiction (military)) Interdiction is disrupting enemy communication and supply lines. Interdiction was already around in the Civil War. During that time, cavalry was the weapon of choice to carry out interdiction. ...
  8. A papal decree prohibiting the administration of the sacraments from a political entity under the power of a single person (e.g., a king or an oligarchy with similar powers). ...
  9. (INTERDICTION) 1. Law: A legal act or decree which commands, prohibits, forbids etc., culturally connected to Roman Law and interdiction as practiced by the Roman Catholic Church. 2. ...
  10. (Interdiction) This is a denial of service, as in the case where a digital ID does not match the password, the SSL secure server will not let that user in without proper identification with SSL validation.
  11. (Interdiction) a tactical air mission which did not normally involve the direct support of friendly ground forces. It may of may not involve a FAC depending on the circumstance. ...
  12. (Interdiction) a type of restraint, usually a bond, imposed by a court. Either imposed by a court upon, or assumed voluntarily by, a person who cannot handle their own affairs its purpose is to prevent them from doing anything which might affect their estate, without the prior consent of those ...
  13. (interdiction) The act of impeding or denying the use of computer system resources to a user. [SRV] (see denial-of-service)
  14. The judicial prohibition issued by the Court of Session or Sheriff Court comparable with the English injunction In an emergency, interim interdict can be obtained ex parte. A court order sought to prevent a particular action being carried out.
  15. an ecclesiastical punishment excluding the faithful from participation in spiritual things; it could be applied to individuals, to local areas such as parishes, or to whole populations
  16. (Latin interdictum , from inter and dicere ). ...
  17. Religious censure, often used in the Middle Ages as a tool by the senior clergy to force a secular lord’s hand. Under the interdict, no religious services can be conducted, so no marriages, burials, or baptisms could be performed. ...
  18. an order of the Court preventing or requiring action, usually made in an emergency. For example, preventing someone from withdrawing funds from a bank account.
  19. A law or religious sanction that prevents, prohibits, or forbids something, as does the king in Dan 6:7-9, where people are prohibited from praying to anyone except the king.
  20. The ecclesiastical banning of all sacraments, except for baptism and extreme unction, throughout a geographical area. High feast days were usually not banned. A sanction used to force persons, institutions, communities or secular lords to accept an unpopular view dictated by the church or pope.
  21. an order issued by the praetor or other magistrate, usually giving rise to further proceedings if disregarded. It was used especially as a procedural device to determine property rights; but it was also the normal way to start proceedings for the protection of both public and private interest. ...
  22. Catholics under interdict are not allowed to have a Christian burial and most of the sacraments are denied to them. However, dying Catholics are allowed to receive the Last Rites. For centuries, popes used the interdict, and the threat of interdict, to force secular rulers to submit to them.