outlawing / ˈaʊtˌlɔ /

取缔违法取缔非法取缔非法的

outlawing3 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a lawless person or habitual criminal, especially one who is a fugitive from the law.
  2. a person, group, or thing excluded from the benefits and protection of the law.
  3. a person under sentence of outlawry.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to make unlawful or illegal: The Eighteenth Amendment outlawed the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating beverages in the U.S.
  2. to deprive of thebenefits and protection of the law: Members of guerrilla bands who refused to surrender were outlawed.
  3. to prohibit: to outlaw smoking in a theater.
  4. to remove from legal jurisdiction; deprive of legal force.
adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. of, relating to, or characteristic of an outlaw.

outlawing 近义词

n. 名词 noun

person who is running from the law

v. 动词 verb

prohibit; make illegal

更多outlawing例句

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. Nationwide, single-family zoning was created just after the Supreme Court outlawed cities from adopting zoning plans that segregated areas explicitly by race.
  4. Meanwhile, Burleson also invoked the Espionage Act to ban circulation of anti-war materials and outlawed worker strikes, with Wilson’s encouragement.
  5. Never mind that women were more likely than men to support outlawing booze.
  6. Added Outlaw: "Just because you're at the beach doesn't mean you can't blow our minds."
  7. And yet, no one in Rio is calling for the end of the campaign to reclaim the outlaw zones of the city.
  8. The outlaw had a long white beard and looked like an intense Willie Nelson.
  9. I first learned about the environmental dangers of growing pot from an old outlaw.
  10. Many court watchers were expecting the justices to outlaw or seriously curtail all uses of race by government actors.
  11. Before the outlaw can comply with this small request the horn sounds again.
  12. In the meantime, the outlaw, having observed how much more cordially the tyrant is received than himself, has made his exit.
  13. But a little earlier still, to be an Infidel was to be an outlaw, subject to the penalty of death.
  14. He was an outlaw, hunted and despised, depending for his life on the caprice of a fickle-minded woman.
  15. You know I am one of those illustrious unfortunates whom governments outlaw.