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Banish

Banish is a verb meaning to compel someone to leave a place or to expel from a community, territory, or institution. It can refer to formal legal punishment or to a broader act of rejection or exclusion. The term also appears in metaphorical uses, as in banishing fears or doubts.

Etymology traces to Old French bannir, from ban "prohibition" or edict, originally signaling a formal decree

Throughout history, banishment has been used by states and authorities to remove individuals deemed dangerous, disloyal,

Today, formal banishment is comparatively rare in modern legal systems, with exile, deportation, or residency restrictions

of
removal.
In
practice,
banishment
has
taken
many
forms:
permanent
exile,
temporary
exile,
or
deportation
with
permission
to
return.
It
is
related
to
but
distinct
from
punishment
that
expels
residents,
and
from
social
ostracism.
or
undesirable.
Ancient
Athens
practiced
ostracism,
a
form
of
collective
banishment;
medieval
and
early
modern
Europe
employed
royal
banishments
and
exile;
in
many
contexts
the
punishment
targeted
political
rivals,
dissenters,
or
criminals.
functioning
as
alternatives.
In
everyday
language,
banish
also
appears
in
literature
and
rhetoric
to
convey
strong
rejection.