different between edict vs bannimus

edict

English

Etymology

From Middle English edycte, borrowed from Latin edictum; earlier form edit, from Old French edit, from the same Latin word.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?i?.d?kt/

Noun

edict (plural edicts)

  1. A proclamation of law or other authoritative command.

Translations

Anagrams

  • cited, ticed

Dutch

Etymology

From Middle Dutch edict, from Latin ?dictum.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /e??d?kt/
  • Hyphenation: edict
  • Rhymes: -?kt

Noun

edict n (plural edicten, diminutive edictje n)

  1. edict

Descendants

  • Afrikaans: edik

Romanian

Etymology

From Latin edictum

Noun

edict n (plural edicte)

  1. edict

Declension

edict From the web:

  • what edict has creon issued
  • what edict encouraged toleration of christianity
  • what edict means


bannimus

English

Etymology

Historically, from Medieval Latin bannimus (we banish, we expel), from bann?, band? (denounce, ban, banish, proclaim, proscribe, verb), influenced in meaning by bannum (ordinance, ban), from Frankish *bannjan (to proclaim, order or prohibit under penalty), from Proto-Germanic *bannijan? (to curse, damn), *bannan? (to request). Cognate with Old High German bannen (to order under penalty, proscribe, cast a spell on), ban (order under penalty). More at ban.

Noun

bannimus (uncountable)

  1. A form of expulsion of any individual from the University of Oxford, by putting the proctorial edict up in some public place, as a denunciation or promulgation of it. It also served to prevent the individual from claiming the cause of expulsion.

Related terms

  • bannition

References

  • bannimus, in Cyclopædia, by Ephraim Chambers, 1680 (ca.)-1740.

bannimus From the web:

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