[
UK
/ɹˈʌstɪkˌeɪt/
]
VERB
-
lend a rustic character to
rusticate the house in the country - suspend temporarily from college or university, in England
-
send to the country
He was rusticated for his bad behavior - give (stone) a rustic look
- live in the country and lead a rustic life
How To Use rusticate In A Sentence
- This almost rusticated or corbelled brickwork technique, together with the raked horizontal joints, imbues the hearth with an earth-pressing monumentality, not unlike that of the Griffins architecture.
- Besides the fine, Proctors can refer the case of any student who admits breaking University regulations to the Court of Summary Jurisdiction, which is able to impose a penalty of £500, or rusticate the member for three terms.
- When the arches were built in the 1840s, the stonework was rusticated patterned by hand to create a dimpled effect on the surface.
- A casual, rusticated set with hay bales, trellises entwined with climbers and gentle harp music played live, establish a mood for us.
- He rusticated himself so long that he has become an absolute country cousin.
- The exterior was formed with contrasting brick colors, while rusticated masonry and brick banding incorporating ornamental ironwork established the nostalgic feel and character of a turn-of-the-century ballpark.
- He was rusticated for his bad behavior
- Details such as the rusticated stone of the entrance wall and the fact that this is carried through into the interior show the degree of care accorded by the designers.
- How is it that all the students who were rusticated were Dalits?
- But, since I've been at Lincoln, three people have been rusticated and now there is a fourth.