Interdict in a sentence as a noun

They will, as a group, realize how foolish it is to constantly interdict people.

Police interdiction numbers will be reduced due to both illness and to "street smarts".

Scotland's Court of Session issued an interim interdict banning the links.

I think we could interdict a canal through Nicaragua just as easily as we could the Panama Canal.

You cannot go around a battleship when one of the primary points in it's design is to be fast enough to interdict anyone.

I'm surprised that should he exist, everyone assumes he is obligated to interdict himself in the affairs of men.

Information flows freely and securely over most of the world and interdicting it at the border is laughable.

Why not interdict all packages going to key government critics?Crazy to think that NSA wouldn't be monitoring journalists to catch their sources.

Interdict in a sentence as a verb

Smart jamming tries to interdict the enemy's communications.

But just piling on the warships and spec-ops to interdict/**** all of them isn't exactly the best way to solve it, as it appears to leave one of the root causes of the phenomenon untouched anyways.

How do you stop a few thousand tanks advancing towards Riga, when your closest mechanized forces are in Poland and the way to Riga goes through the Suwalki gap [3] that the Russians can easily interdict?

Some languages try to interdict this state of affairs, shielding us from each other, but the more fun languages let us burn ourselves and our colleagues and finally learn restraint in ways you never learn in languages with training wheels.

Agents can operate with reasonably little personal risk via electronic means to gain access, or interdict and retool equipment if sufficient backdoors don't already exist.

And herein lies the oppressiveness of institutionalized irony, the too-successful rebel: the ability to interdict the question without attending to its content is tyranny.

A golden age, a paradise, are the mythical representations of an existence which initially meets its demands, of a mode of life whose regularity owes nothing to the establishment of rules, of a state of guiltlessness in the absence of the interdict that ignorance of the law is no excuse.

She just wants to cut hair to make money to stay alive, but you have to arrest her, which could lead to a confrontation with her and her 'supporters with guns'.An ideology of 'land of the free' will necessarily have excessive conflict at the margins where said freedoms interdict with the ostensible freedoms of others and you have law enforcement in the middle trying to sort it out in sometimes ambiguous situations.

Interdict definitions

noun

an ecclesiastical censure by the Roman Catholic Church withdrawing certain sacraments and Christian burial from a person or all persons in a particular district

noun

a court order prohibiting a party from doing a certain activity

See also: interdiction

verb

destroy by firepower, such as an enemy's line of communication

verb

command against; "I forbid you to call me late at night"; "Mother vetoed the trip to the chocolate store"; "Dad nixed our plans"

See also: forbid prohibit proscribe veto disallow