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🗓️ 1 June 2025
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 1, 2025 is:
proscribe • \proh-SCRYBE\ • verb
Proscribe is a formal word meaning “to condemn or forbid something as harmful or unlawful.” More broadly, it can mean simply “to not allow something.”
// The town has passed an ordinance that proscribes the ownership of snakes and other exotic pets.
Examples:
“While the order proscribes new drilling along most of both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, the order does not affect active drilling permits and carves out the most important areas of offshore production such as the western Gulf of Mexico near Texas and Louisiana.” — Jeff Young, Newsweek, 6 Jan. 2025
Did you know?
Signs, signs, everywhere, signs: some prescribe (“do this”) and others proscribe (“don’t do that”). Don’t take it as a bad sign if you have difficulty telling prescribe and proscribe apart, however; you’ve got plenty of company, and a good excuse. Proscribe and prescribe both come from Latin words that combine a prefix meaning “before” with the verb scribere, meaning “to write.” Yet the two words have very distinct, often nearly opposite meanings, hints of which emerge upon a closer look at their origins. Prescribe comes from praescribere, meaning “to dictate, order”—clear enough for a word used when making rules and giving orders. Proscribe has a more complex history: proscribere means both “to publish” and, more specifically, “to publish the name of someone who is condemned to death and whose property is now forfeited to the state.” This narrower meaning is the one proscribe carried into English when it was first used in the 15th century. By the early 17th century, the word had expanded from merely signaling condemnation to actual condemning or prohibiting.
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0:00.0 | It's the Word of the Day podcast for June 1st. |
0:11.0 | Today's word is proscribe, spelled P-R-O-S-C-R-I-B-E. |
0:17.0 | Proscribe is a verb. It's a formal word meaning to condemn or forbid something as harmful or |
0:22.6 | unlawful. More broadly, it can mean simply to not allow something. Here's the word used. In a sentence |
0:28.8 | from Newsweek by Jeff Young, while the order prescribes new drilling along most of both the Atlantic |
0:34.6 | and Pacific coasts, the order does not affect active drilling permits |
0:38.9 | and carves out the most important areas of offshore production, such as the Western Gulf of Mexico |
0:45.0 | near Texas and Louisiana. Signs, signs, everywhere, signs. Some prescribe, do this. Others prescribe. Don't't do that don't take it as a bad sign if you have |
0:59.0 | difficulty telling prescribe and proscribe apart you've got plenty of company and a good excuse proscribe and |
1:06.5 | prescribe both come from latin words that combine a prefix, meaning before, with the verb |
1:12.1 | scriberi, meaning to write. |
1:14.2 | Yet the two words have very distinct, often nearly opposite meanings, hints of which |
1:19.5 | emerge upon a closer look at their origins. |
1:23.2 | Prescribe comes from priescriberae, meaning to dictate or order. Clear enough for a word used |
1:29.2 | when making rules and giving orders. Proscribe has a more complex history. Proscribore means both |
1:36.0 | to publish, and, more specifically, to publish the name of someone who is condemned to death |
1:41.3 | and whose property is now forfeited to the state. This narrower meaning |
1:46.2 | is the one prescribed carried into English when it was first used in the 15th century. By the early |
1:51.8 | 17th century, the word had expanded from merely signaling condemnation to actual condemning or |
1:58.0 | prohibiting. With your word of the day, I'm Peter Salkaloz. |
2:03.8 | Visit Miriamwebster.com today for definitions, wordplay, and trending word lookups. |
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