outlawing 的 3 个定义
- a lawless person or habitual criminal, especially one who is a fugitive from the law.
- a person, group, or thing excluded from the benefits and protection of the law.
- a person under sentence of outlawry.
- (5)
- to make unlawful or illegal: The Eighteenth Amendment outlawed the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating beverages in the U.S.
- to deprive of thebenefits and protection of the law: Members of guerrilla bands who refused to surrender were outlawed.
- to prohibit: to outlaw smoking in a theater.
- to remove from legal jurisdiction; deprive of legal force.
- of, relating to, or characteristic of an outlaw.
outlawing 近义词
person who is running from the law
prohibit; make illegal
更多outlawing例句
- Since the new regulations outlawed surface expressions last year, more than two dozen have occurred in Kern County, the heart of the state’s oil industry.
- While the industry has grown enormously—the value of Bitcoin in circulation is now worth over $200 billion—and made inroads into traditional finance, crypto has not entirely shaken its outlaw reputation.
- Nationwide, single-family zoning was created just after the Supreme Court outlawed cities from adopting zoning plans that segregated areas explicitly by race.
- Meanwhile, Burleson also invoked the Espionage Act to ban circulation of anti-war materials and outlawed worker strikes, with Wilson’s encouragement.
- Never mind that women were more likely than men to support outlawing booze.
- Added Outlaw: "Just because you're at the beach doesn't mean you can't blow our minds."
- And yet, no one in Rio is calling for the end of the campaign to reclaim the outlaw zones of the city.
- The outlaw had a long white beard and looked like an intense Willie Nelson.
- I first learned about the environmental dangers of growing pot from an old outlaw.
- Many court watchers were expecting the justices to outlaw or seriously curtail all uses of race by government actors.
- Before the outlaw can comply with this small request the horn sounds again.
- In the meantime, the outlaw, having observed how much more cordially the tyrant is received than himself, has made his exit.
- But a little earlier still, to be an Infidel was to be an outlaw, subject to the penalty of death.
- He was an outlaw, hunted and despised, depending for his life on the caprice of a fickle-minded woman.
- You know I am one of those illustrious unfortunates whom governments outlaw.