Obs. In 7 exauctorat. [ad. L. exauctōrāt-us, pa. pple. of exauctōrāre: see next.] Deprived of office; divested of authority.

1

1680.  Hickes, Spir. Popery, 9. Saying, that Jesus Christ is quite exauctorat and unkinged by it.

2

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.

3

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’ ower—he was clean exauctorate.’

4