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词汇 expulsion
释义

Definition of expulsion in English:

expulsion

noun ɛkˈspʌlʃ(ə)nɪkˈspʌlʃ(ə)nɪkˈspəlʃən
mass noun
  • 1The action of forcing someone to leave an organization.

    开除;除名

    his expulsion from the union

    从工会的除名。

    count noun a rise in the number of pupil expulsions

    被开除学生人数的增加。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A second yellow card is equal to a red card, which means automatic expulsion.
    • The vote split 19-19, with the chairman's casting vote sealing his expulsion.
    • Last summer controversy surrounded the board of management when their treasurer's solicitors challenged the validity of his expulsion from the board.
    • Previously, expulsion from school was the punishment of last resort for head teachers.
    • We were given an option to either resign or face expulsion from the party.
    • The result was the mass workplace expulsions in July 1920 which severely weakened trade union organization in the city.
    • Two years later the foundation suspended the country's voting rights and began the process that could lead to expulsion.
    • The protests won widespread support despite freezing cold temperatures in many parts of the US and threats of suspension or expulsion from some high school administrators.
    • He risked censure, expulsion from the House, even his life, to ensure that the halls of our government resounded with the voice of the people.
    • Legal rights for parents to appeal against suspension or expulsion from schools have made it more difficult to exclude troublesome students.
    • The ultimate result was his expulsion from the game, along with a crackdown on some of the scamsters and mobs he had described.
    • Anyone who questioned Stalin's decisions faced instant expulsion from the party, imprisonment and in some cases execution.
    • In the University of the East, 10 student leaders who participated in last semester's protest are now facing a one-year suspension and expulsion from the university.
    • But his outspoken comments on race - now retracted under pain of expulsion from the party - have sent some shivers down Tory strategists.
    • She called for automatic expulsion for pupils who made malicious allegations against teachers.
    • He challenged his colleague to re-affirm his support for the Conservative Party or himself face expulsion from the party.
    • H has drawn a line in the sand that his club may have to cross or else face expulsion from the competition, and the financial losses that would undoubtedly bring.
    • Please ensure we do not have to face the shame and indignity of expulsion from a major tournament.
    • Anyone who doesn't live up to the terms of the agreement can face expulsion from the Academy, and legal action from the copyright holders if a pirated screener is traced back to them.
    • Certain behaviors or behavior repetitions were sufficiently extreme to result in permanent expulsion from school.
    Synonyms
    removal, debarment, dismissal, exclusion, discharge, ejection, rejection, blackballing, blacklisting
    suspension
    banishment, exile, deportation, eviction, expatriation, repatriation, refoulement, purging, displacement, transportation
    informal sacking, drumming out, the bounce
    1. 1.1 The action or process of forcing someone to leave a place.
      逐出;驱逐(尤指驱逐出境)
      the expulsion of two diplomats from the embassy
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Taken together, the mass flight and expulsions amounted to the single largest known migration over a short period of time.
      • Buying a car or cheating in a business deal etc. is cause for immediate expulsion.
      • ‘Fast-tracking’ is a crude euphemism for the abrogation of basic civil liberties and the rapid expulsion of asylum-seekers.
      • The idea that the intervention was intended to halt mass expulsions and genocide has always been a convenient fantasy.
      • These structural changes were aggravated by the expulsion of large peasant masses, which increased poverty and unemployment in big cities.
      • The UN emergency relief co-ordinator warned on Monday that the mass expulsions could lead to a humanitarian crisis.
      • Forcible expulsion of a population is reprehensible and a violation of international law.
      • We are not demanding mass expulsions but we're asking that everybody in positions of authority signal that there is a problem.
      • More disturbingly, the government has inaugurated a policy of forcible expulsions from camps for the displaced.
      • They have ordered the expulsion of a diplomat it accuses of spying.
      • The Moors infused an exotic orientalism into Spanish culture which exercised a deep influence even after their final expulsion in the 15th century.
      • Will there be a repeat of the mass expulsions?
      • After the expulsion of the Moors and the immense political turmoil that ensued, population size and agricultural productivity dropped.
      • Officials on Monday announced the expulsion of two diplomats from the embassy in Manila for alleged espionage.
      • Any little mistake would result in immediate expulsion back to Thailand.
      • Significant numbers had a family history of forced expulsion from their homes and had lost parents and relatives.
      • Forced expulsion and mass ethnic cleansing were added to the human rights abuse record of torture, disappearance, and assassination.
      • In fact they were defending the old Spain of privilege and poverty, threatened by the masses entering politics after the 1931 expulsion of the monarchy.
      • During the continental wars before and after their expulsion, the Yamato, having become skilled as mounted archers, were often called upon to help their allies.
      • At this meeting, the Belgian authorities were asked to postpone expulsion of the applicant until the Commission's next session, which was due to begin on 26 February 1979.
      Synonyms
      expelling, banishment, banishing, exile, exiling, transportation, transporting, extradition, extraditing, expatriation, expatriating, repatriation, repatriating, refoulement
    2. 1.2 The action of forcing something out of the body.
      (从体内的)排出,呼出
      oxytocin causes expulsion of milk from the lactating mammary gland
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The book documents the consumption and expulsion of material into our primary instrument, namely the body.
      • Getting your hair in the bleachy water will infect everyone with bubonic plague, whereas all other bodily orifice exposure and expulsion is quite alright.
      • Dehydration is common following the farrowing process because the sow has lost body water from the expulsion of birth products.
      • Tribeswomen in turn expedite the sperm expulsion process by taking matters into their own hands.
      • The healer sighed as she slumped, her body exhausted after the expulsion of energy.
      • The most common adverse effects of IUDs are cramping, abnormal uterine bleeding, and expulsion.
      • The drug has been shown to cause uterine contractions and expulsion of conception products.
      • The third type of intervention is administration of cathartic agents to increase gastrointestinal motility and hasten the expulsion of the toxin.
      • The process of converting alcohol to acetic acid requires water, as well as the expulsion of acetic acid from the body through urination.
      • Vomiting was defined as expulsion of gastric material occurring at least once in the previous 24 hours.
      • Our teacher then taught us several breathing techniques which were promised to result in a calm expulsion of toxins, the release of pent-up emotions and a sizzling spurt of energy.
      • You can tell a loud yawner to shut up, and she will yawn with more tonal precaution, turning her yawn into a softer, more weightless expulsion of breath.
      Synonyms
      discharge, ejection, excretion, voiding, voidance, evacuation, ejaculation, disgorgement, elimination, emptying out, passing, draining

Derivatives

  • expulsive

  • adjective ɪkˈspʌlsɪvɛkˈspʌlsɪvɪkˈspəlsɪv
    • A cough has three different phases: the inspiratory phase, the compressive phase, and the expulsive phase.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He was so outraged by what he saw as a sort of angry, expulsive element, that he wanted no truck with it.
      • Whether one argues that the country is responding to an oppressive regime with expulsive force or aggressively targeting the nation, they won't be doing anything they haven't done before.
      • Uncontrolled hypertension presents an increased risk of orbital haemorrhage during injection of local anaesthetic and potentially of peroperative suprachoroidal expulsive haemorrhage.
      • Traction should be in line with the pelvic axis and coordinated with maternal expulsive efforts.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Latin expulsio(n-), from expellere 'drive out' (see expel).

Rhymes

avulsion, compulsion, convulsion, emulsion, impulsion, propulsion, repulsion, revulsion

Definition of expulsion in US English:

expulsion

nounikˈspəlSHənɪkˈspəlʃən
  • 1The action of depriving someone of membership in an organization.

    开除;除名

    expulsion from school

    从工会的除名。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • We were given an option to either resign or face expulsion from the party.
    • The vote split 19-19, with the chairman's casting vote sealing his expulsion.
    • She called for automatic expulsion for pupils who made malicious allegations against teachers.
    • Please ensure we do not have to face the shame and indignity of expulsion from a major tournament.
    • Previously, expulsion from school was the punishment of last resort for head teachers.
    • Anyone who questioned Stalin's decisions faced instant expulsion from the party, imprisonment and in some cases execution.
    • He risked censure, expulsion from the House, even his life, to ensure that the halls of our government resounded with the voice of the people.
    • Legal rights for parents to appeal against suspension or expulsion from schools have made it more difficult to exclude troublesome students.
    • Two years later the foundation suspended the country's voting rights and began the process that could lead to expulsion.
    • Anyone who doesn't live up to the terms of the agreement can face expulsion from the Academy, and legal action from the copyright holders if a pirated screener is traced back to them.
    • Last summer controversy surrounded the board of management when their treasurer's solicitors challenged the validity of his expulsion from the board.
    • The result was the mass workplace expulsions in July 1920 which severely weakened trade union organization in the city.
    • But his outspoken comments on race - now retracted under pain of expulsion from the party - have sent some shivers down Tory strategists.
    • H has drawn a line in the sand that his club may have to cross or else face expulsion from the competition, and the financial losses that would undoubtedly bring.
    • The protests won widespread support despite freezing cold temperatures in many parts of the US and threats of suspension or expulsion from some high school administrators.
    • He challenged his colleague to re-affirm his support for the Conservative Party or himself face expulsion from the party.
    • A second yellow card is equal to a red card, which means automatic expulsion.
    • The ultimate result was his expulsion from the game, along with a crackdown on some of the scamsters and mobs he had described.
    • In the University of the East, 10 student leaders who participated in last semester's protest are now facing a one-year suspension and expulsion from the university.
    • Certain behaviors or behavior repetitions were sufficiently extreme to result in permanent expulsion from school.
    Synonyms
    removal, debarment, dismissal, exclusion, discharge, ejection, rejection, blackballing, blacklisting
    1. 1.1 The process of forcing someone to leave a place, especially a country.
      逐出;驱逐(尤指驱逐出境)
      the expulsion of the Jesuits from Spain
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Buying a car or cheating in a business deal etc. is cause for immediate expulsion.
      • More disturbingly, the government has inaugurated a policy of forcible expulsions from camps for the displaced.
      • Forcible expulsion of a population is reprehensible and a violation of international law.
      • During the continental wars before and after their expulsion, the Yamato, having become skilled as mounted archers, were often called upon to help their allies.
      • We are not demanding mass expulsions but we're asking that everybody in positions of authority signal that there is a problem.
      • After the expulsion of the Moors and the immense political turmoil that ensued, population size and agricultural productivity dropped.
      • Taken together, the mass flight and expulsions amounted to the single largest known migration over a short period of time.
      • In fact they were defending the old Spain of privilege and poverty, threatened by the masses entering politics after the 1931 expulsion of the monarchy.
      • Officials on Monday announced the expulsion of two diplomats from the embassy in Manila for alleged espionage.
      • ‘Fast-tracking’ is a crude euphemism for the abrogation of basic civil liberties and the rapid expulsion of asylum-seekers.
      • The Moors infused an exotic orientalism into Spanish culture which exercised a deep influence even after their final expulsion in the 15th century.
      • These structural changes were aggravated by the expulsion of large peasant masses, which increased poverty and unemployment in big cities.
      • Any little mistake would result in immediate expulsion back to Thailand.
      • Significant numbers had a family history of forced expulsion from their homes and had lost parents and relatives.
      • The idea that the intervention was intended to halt mass expulsions and genocide has always been a convenient fantasy.
      • They have ordered the expulsion of a diplomat it accuses of spying.
      • Will there be a repeat of the mass expulsions?
      • Forced expulsion and mass ethnic cleansing were added to the human rights abuse record of torture, disappearance, and assassination.
      • At this meeting, the Belgian authorities were asked to postpone expulsion of the applicant until the Commission's next session, which was due to begin on 26 February 1979.
      • The UN emergency relief co-ordinator warned on Monday that the mass expulsions could lead to a humanitarian crisis.
      Synonyms
      expelling, banishment, banishing, exile, exiling, transportation, transporting, extradition, extraditing, expatriation, expatriating, repatriation, repatriating, refoulement
    2. 1.2 The process of forcing something out of the body.
      (从体内的)排出,呼出
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Getting your hair in the bleachy water will infect everyone with bubonic plague, whereas all other bodily orifice exposure and expulsion is quite alright.
      • The book documents the consumption and expulsion of material into our primary instrument, namely the body.
      • Dehydration is common following the farrowing process because the sow has lost body water from the expulsion of birth products.
      • You can tell a loud yawner to shut up, and she will yawn with more tonal precaution, turning her yawn into a softer, more weightless expulsion of breath.
      • The third type of intervention is administration of cathartic agents to increase gastrointestinal motility and hasten the expulsion of the toxin.
      • The most common adverse effects of IUDs are cramping, abnormal uterine bleeding, and expulsion.
      • The drug has been shown to cause uterine contractions and expulsion of conception products.
      • Our teacher then taught us several breathing techniques which were promised to result in a calm expulsion of toxins, the release of pent-up emotions and a sizzling spurt of energy.
      • The process of converting alcohol to acetic acid requires water, as well as the expulsion of acetic acid from the body through urination.
      • Vomiting was defined as expulsion of gastric material occurring at least once in the previous 24 hours.
      • Tribeswomen in turn expedite the sperm expulsion process by taking matters into their own hands.
      • The healer sighed as she slumped, her body exhausted after the expulsion of energy.
      Synonyms
      discharge, ejection, excretion, voiding, voidance, evacuation, ejaculation, disgorgement, elimination, emptying out, passing, draining

Origin

Late Middle English: from Latin expulsio(n-), from expellere ‘drive out’ (see expel).

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