rusticate

[ UK /ɹˈʌstɪkˌe‍ɪt/ ]
VERB
  1. lend a rustic character to
    rusticate the house in the country
  2. suspend temporarily from college or university, in England
  3. send to the country
    He was rusticated for his bad behavior
  4. give (stone) a rustic look
  5. live in the country and lead a rustic life
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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.
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