banish Meaning, Definition & Usage

  1. verb expel from a community or group
    ostracize; blackball; shun; cast out; ban; ostracise.
  2. verb ban from a place of residence, as for punishment
    ban.
  3. verb expel, as if by official decree
    relegate; bar.
    • he was banished from his own country
  4. verb drive away
    • banish bad thoughts
    • banish gloom

WordNet


Ban"ish transitive verb
Etymology
OF. banir, F. bannir, LL. bannire, fr. OHG. bannan to summon, fr. ban ban. See Ban an edict, and Finish, v. t.
Wordforms
imperfect & past participle Banished(); present participle & verbal noun Banishing
Definitions
  1. To condemn to exile, or compel to leave one's country, by authority of the ruling power. "We banish you our territories." Shak.
  2. To drive out, as from a home or familiar place; -- used with from and out of.
    How the ancient Celtic tongue came to be banished from the Low Countries in Scotland. Blair.
  3. To drive away; to compel to depart; to dispel. "Banish all offense." Shak. Syn. -- To Banish, Exile, Expel. The idea of a coercive removal from a place is common to these terms. A man is banished when he is forced by the government of a country (be he a foreigner or a native) to leave its borders. A man is exiled when he is driven into banishment from his native country and home. Thus to exile is to banish, but to banish is not always to exile. To expel is to eject or banish, summarily or authoritatively, and usually under circumstances of disgrace; as, to expel from a college; expelled from decent society.

Webster 1913