Debar vs Rusticate - What's the difference?
debar | rusticate |
To exclude or shut out; to bar.
(US, legal) To prohibit a person or company that has been convicted of criminal acts in connection with an application for approval of a new drug from participating in future applications.
(British) To suspend or expel from a college or university.
To construct in a manner so as to produce jagged or heavily textured surfaces.
To compel to live in or to send to the countryside; to cause to become rustic.
To go to reside in the country.
As verbs the difference between debar and rusticate
is that debar is to exclude or shut out; to bar while rusticate is to suspend or expel from a college or university.As a proper noun Debar
is a city in the west of the Republic of Macedonia.debar
English
Verb
(debarr)Usage notes
* Not to be confused with (disbar).Derived terms
* debarmentAnagrams
*rusticate
English
Verb
(rusticat)- (Alexander Pope)
