excommunicate in English

verb
1
officially exclude (someone) from participation in the sacraments and services of the Christian Church.
He left for France and then Germany, where he was excommunicated by the Lutheran Church, and returned to Italy in the mistaken belief that it would be safe to do so.
adjective
1
excommunicated.
all violators were to be pronounced excommunicate
noun
1
an excommunicated person.
The Constitutions of Clarendon expressly forbade any oath about future conduct being required from an excommunicate .

Use "excommunicate" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "excommunicate" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "excommunicate", or refer to the context using the word "excommunicate" in the English Dictionary.

1. 15 To put under a ban or an anathema; excommunicate.

2. 14 Its no longer possible to excommunicate someone already excommunicated.

3. To put under a ban or an anathema; excommunicate.

4. Now I insist that we call upon our bishop to excommunicate him!

5. The Chinese Christians, therefore, practically excommunicate themselves from their own clan.

6. 24 Now, I insist that we call upon our bishop to excommunicate him!

7. 11 The Chinese Christians, therefore, practically excommunicate themselves from their own clan.

8. 1 The Chinese Christians, therefore, practically excommunicate themselves from their own clan.

9. 26 The Church reacted to this stance with characteristic fury, threatening to excommunicate the president.

10. 19 Sfeir threatened - for the second time in a month - to excommunicate those refusing to lay down their arms.

11. 18 The logical result of excommunication was deposition, for an excommunicate bishop or king could not rule a diocese or kingdom.

12. The Churches and the sects had devastated Europe, engineered massacres, demanded religious resistance or revolution, attempted to excommunicate or to depose monarchs.”

13. The logical result of excommunication was deposition, for an excommunicate bishop or king could not rule a diocese or kingdom.

14. 7 The logical result of excommunication was deposition, for an excommunicate bishop or king could not rule a diocese or kingdom.

15. 23 For example, he holds that Saint Ambrose had no right to excommunicate the Emperor Theodosius after the massacre of Thessalonica.

16. 25 Most rulers and a few city councils did a little to protect Jews; Pope Clement threatened to excommunicate their persecutors.

17. To preach the word Authoritatively, dispense the sacraments, ordain their officers, admonish offenders, excommunicate the obstinate and incorrigible, and absolve the penitent

18. 16 The Vatican says it expects to excommunicate two men who were ordained as Catholic Bishops in China this week without the approval of Pope Benedict.

19. 27 If anyone ever clogged up my inbox with such self-righteousness, it would indeed stem the tide of e-mail: I would excommunicate them at once.

20. History and Etymology for Aphorismos Late Greek (influenced in meaning by aphorizein to excommunicate, from Greek, to cast out), from Greek, definition, short, pithy sentence Learn More about Aphorismos Dictionary Entries near Aphorismos

21. Avowedly jegulja Sweepers flanker enrage kat pompa provento biti usmjeren alubias verdes plachetnice amoveo, abrogo, extraho extraxi extractum, abdo cyklistka soundtrack excommunicate אלקסיי (שם פרטי) beaten balanced filter maslinovo ulje Pressemeldung armhule snappy sound sarna chondrus millionth baong lalake agression litoraal

22. If the Pope in Rome still holds some sway over his LA bishops, he should retire them, void the settlement, proclaim that the church will never agree to be hold responsible for any individual's misdeed and excommunicate and Anathemise everyone who participated in this circus.

23. Anathematize (v.) "to pronounce an anathema against, denounce, curse," 1560s, from French anathématiser (Old French anatemer), from Late Latin anathematizare, from Ecclesiastical Greek Anathematizein "to devote (to evil); excommunicate," from stem of anathema (q.v.)

24. This page shows answers to the clue Anathematize.Anathematize may be defined as “To pronounce an anathema against”, “To formally curse, to denounce, or to excommunicate someone or something” and “To curse or to declare to be evil or anathema or to threaten with divine punishment

25. The statement of anathematization began with these words: “We excommunicate, anathematize, curse and damn him.” (This comes from Paul Johnson, “A History of Christianity,” page 199.) The Council of Trent hurled 125 Anathemas at anybody who disagreed with even one small point of the doctrines defined by it.

26. Anathematize [from French anathématiser, from Late Latin anathematizare, from Ecclesiastical Greek Anathematizein “to devote (to evil); excommunicate”]: to curse, denounce Lanuginous [from Latin lanuginosus , lanugo , Latin for “down”; lanugo is also an English word used especially to refer to the soft woolly hair that covers the fetus

27. Allegorizers of Torah and the Story of Their Prosecution in Languedoc (1305) The attempt of the great Catalonian Sage, Rashba, to limit philosophic study and interpretation of Torah in Languedoc (southern France)[1] and to excommunicate one of its well-known practitioners, Levi ben Avraham ben Hayyim of Villefranche-de-Conflent