discommon
1Discommon — Dis*com mon, v. t. 1. To deprive of the right of common. [R.] Bp. Hall. [1913 Webster] 2. To deprive of privileges. [R.] T. Warton. [1913 Webster] 3. (Law) To deprive of commonable quality, as lands, by inclosing or appropriating. Burrill. [1913… …
2discommon — /dis kom euhn/, v.t. 1. (at Oxford and Cambridge) to prohibit (tradespeople or townspeople who have violated the regulations of the university) from dealing with the undergraduates. 2. Law. to deprive of the character of a common, as by enclosing …
3discommon — dis·common …
4discommon — /diskoman/ To deprive commonable lands of their commonable quality, by inclosing and appropriating or improving them …
5discommon — /diskoman/ To deprive commonable lands of their commonable quality, by inclosing and appropriating or improving them …
6discommon — To deprive of a right of common; to change common property into private property …
7discommon — də̇s, (ˈ)dis+ transitive verb Etymology: Middle English discomenen, from dis (I) + comen, commun common (n.) more at common 1. obsolete : to exclude or banish from a community of interest; …
8appropriare et includere communiam — To appropriate and enclose a common; to discommon …