Proscribo, proscribis, p. pr. proscripsi, proscriptum, proscribere. Ci. To sell openly: to proclaime or publish any thing to be solde.Aedes proscribere.Cic.To set vp a bill on his house that hee will sell it.Proscribere se auctionem facturum.Cic.Proscribere vænale. Curtius ad Ciceronem. Proscribere aliquem. Ci. To banish, to put out of the Princes protection: to proclaime that whosoeuer sindeth him may lawfully siea him, and haue reward for his labour.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
prō-scrībo, psi, ptum, 3, v. a., to write before or in front of, to write over or upon, to inscribe.I. In gen. (post-Aug.): vultus voluntariā poenarum lege proscripti,
written over
,
inscribed
, Petr. 107.—II. In partic. A.To publish any thing by writing (freq. and class.): ut quo die esse oporteret idus Januarias, eo die Calendas Martias proscriberet, Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 52, 129: quam (legem) non is promulgavit, quo nomine proscriptam videtis, id. ib. 2, 5, 69, 177: non proscriptā neque edictā die, id. ib. 1, 54, 141: venationem, id. Att. 16, 4, 1: leges, Tac. A. 13, 51: versiculos per vias, Gell. 15, 4, 3.—(b). With obj.-clause: senatum Calendis velle se frequentem adesse, etiam Formiis proscribi jussit, Cic. Att. 9, 17, 1: proscribit se auctionem esse facturum, id. Quint. 4, 15; cf. Suet. Caes. 49.— B.To offer in writing any thing for sale, lease, or hire, or as to be sold by auction, to post up, advertise: proscribere palam sic accipimus, claris litteris, ut, etc., Dig. 14, 3, 11: Racilius tabulam proscripsit, se familiam Catonianam venditurum, Cic. Q. Fr. 2, 6, 5: Claudius proscripsit insulam, vendidit, id. Off. 3, 16, 65.—C.To publish a person as having forfeited his property, to punish with confiscation, to confiscate one's property (cf. publico): quaero enim, quid sit aliud proscribere. Velitis, jubeatis, ut M. Tullius in civitate ne sit, bonaque ejus ut mea sint, Cic. Dom. 17, 43: Pompeium,
to confiscate the estates gained by him
, id. Agr. 2, 36, 99: vicinos,
to confiscate the lands of one's neighbors
, id. ib. 3, 4, 14: possessiones, id. ib.: bona, Plin. Ep. 8, 18, 5.—D.To proscribe, outlaw one, by hanging up a tablet with his name and sentence of outlawry, confiscation of goods, etc.: posteaquam victoria constituta est, cum proscriberentur homines, qui adversarii fuisse putabantur, Cic. Rosc. Am. 6, 16: victoriā Sullae parentes, Sall. C. 37, 9: modus proscribendi, Suet. Aug. 27.—Hence, P. a., as subst.: prōscriptus, i, an outlaw, one proscribed: contra legem Corneliam, quae proscriptum juvari vetat, Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 47, 123: proscriptorum liberos honores petere puduit, Plin. 7, 30, 31, 117: in proscriptorum numero esse, Sall. C. 51, 33: bona proscriptorum, id. H. 1, 31 Dietsch.— 2.Trop.: cujus pudoris dignitas in concione proscripta sit,