Destierro in english
Exile
pronunciation: egzaɪl part of speech: noun
pronunciation: egzaɪl part of speech: noun
In gestures
desterrar1 = banish ; exile ; excommunicate.
Example: Many types and colours of shelving are now available, and forbidding dark wooden bookcases have been banished from most libraries.Example: He was unjustly court-martialed in 1894 for high treason and exiled to a penal colony on the coast of South America.Example: Another early hero of Surrealism, Salvador Dali, had been excommunicated for a rankling crime: success.more:
» desterrar de + Posesivo + país = banish + Nombre + from + Posesivo + country .
Example: Besides, Ozai was unthinkably mean to his son: he scarred his face, humiliated him, banished him from his country and even tried to kill him.desterrar2 = eradicate ; purge ; stamp out.
Example: In this instance links would be insufficient to eradicate the false drop.Example: The system requests the number of the borrower and then purges that borrower's name and number from its files.Example: The existence of the Internet and World Wide Web has made it almost impossible to stamp out crimes committed by hackers.destierro = banishment ; exile ; excommunication.
Example: Prisons were invented to substitute for the whip, stocks, banishment, & fines.Example: Slake's Limbo belongs to a large category of fiction that deals in exile, whether enforced or self-sought.Example: Excommunication is the most severe punishment that a church disciplinary council can hand down against a member.more:
» morir en el destierro = die in + exile .
Example: Everyone is born a king, and most people die in exile, like most kings.