Definition of "discommon"
discommon
verb
third-person singular simple present discommons, present participle discommoning, simple past and past participle discommoned
(historical, UK) To deprive of the privilege of citizenship of a town or city.
Quotations
But what punishment is laid vpon Recusants, by the rare clemencie of her Maiestie, any way comparable to those that Christian Emperours haue made against Recusants, or such as refused to communicate with the Church of Christ? They were discommoned from buying and selling, from bequeathing their goods or lands to others, or receiuing anie Legacies from others, yea they might not inioy their fathers inheritaunce, &c. What like thing is done to English Recusants? or rather what not vnlike? they buy, they sell, they bequeath their goods at their pleasure, they receiue legacies, and inioy inheritances.
1600, Francis Hastings, An apologie or defence of the watch-word, page 161
Let us not leave our fellowship, and estrange our selves from Gods people […] To be discommoned a Town, or for a Citizen to be banished a city, is a great evill: But to be an exile from Gods city, and discommoned [i.e. excommunicated] from the communion of Saints, this is lamentable indeed.
1647, Paul Bayne, An Entire Commentary upon the Whole Epistle of the Apostle Paul to the Ephesians, page 277
And as a confirmation of the obligation of residence, which we have before insisted upon, it appears, the person, in strict conformity with the common law, was "discommoned," or disfranchised, because he had not inhabited within the city for the space of one year.
1835, Henry Alworth Merewether, The History of the Boroughs and Municipal Corporations of the United Kingdom, volume 2, page 1252
(historical, law) To deprive (lands etc.) of commonable quality, by enclosing or appropriating.
Quotations
She saw in front of her a two-storey house, standing back from the gravel pathway, on the edge of a triangular piece of turf which represented, no doubt, a more extensive village green, now discommoned and taken in by the private dwellings scattered around.
1888, William Francis Barry, The New Antigone: A Romance, page 53
(transitive, UK, Oxford and Cambridge universities, historical) To deprive of the right to deal with undergraduates.
Quotations
It could 'discommon' any citizen (most of whom, the Laudian statutes grumbled, 'catch at every occasion of impugning the University privileges') or privileged person should they 'oppose the University privileges'; for a privileged person this meant a suspension of privileges and for a citizen an embargo on dealing with any member of the University.
2013, Ian Gadd, Ian Anders Gadd, Simon Eliot, History of Oxford University Press, page 559