expel
ex|pel /ɪksp'el/ (expels expelling expelled)
1 [VERB] usu passive, be V-ed, V-ed
If someone is expelled from a school or organization, they are officially told to leave because they have behaved badly.
More than five-thousand secondary school students have been expelled for cheating.
...a boy expelled from school for making death threats to his teacher.
2 [VERB] be V-ed, V n
If people are expelled from a place, they are made to leave it, often by force.
An American academic was expelled from the country yesterday...
They were told at first that they should simply expel the refugees.
3 [VERB] V n
To expel something means to force it out from a container or from your body.
As the lungs exhale this waste, gas is expelled into the atmosphere.
1 [VERB] usu passive, be V-ed, V-ed
If someone is expelled from a school or organization, they are officially told to leave because they have behaved badly.
More than five-thousand secondary school students have been expelled for cheating.
...a boy expelled from school for making death threats to his teacher.
2 [VERB] be V-ed, V n
If people are expelled from a place, they are made to leave it, often by force.
An American academic was expelled from the country yesterday...
They were told at first that they should simply expel the refugees.
3 [VERB] V n
To expel something means to force it out from a container or from your body.
As the lungs exhale this waste, gas is expelled into the atmosphere.