Obs. In 7 exauctorat. [ad. L. exauctōrāt-us, pa. pple. of exauctōrāre: see next.] Deprived of office; divested of authority.
1680. Hickes, Spir. Popery, 9. Saying, that Jesus Christ is quite exauctorat and unkinged by it.
1718. Wodrow, Corr. (1843), II. 370. If we refuse to baptize in families, people will go to the exauctorate Episcopal clergy, and leave our communion.
1818. Scott, Hrt. Midl., iv. He [was] then in a point of trust and in point of power but after Wilson was cut down, it was a owerhe was clean exauctorate.