eject / ɪˈdʒɛkt /

⚽高中词汇弹出顶出弹射弹出式

eject2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to drive or force out; expel, as from a place or position: The police ejected the hecklers from the meeting.
  2. to dismiss, as from office or occupancy.
  3. to evict, as from property.
  4. to throw out, as from within; throw off.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to propel oneself from a damaged or malfunctioning airplane, as by an ejection seat: When the plane caught fire, the pilot ejected.

eject 近义词

v. 动词 verb

throw or be thrown out

更多eject例句

  1. They forecast a zone of low pressure ejecting from the Southwest United States to end up between Kentucky and Ohio late Sunday before a new low-pressure center forms over eastern North Carolina.
  2. Membership to such an extremist group would be clear grounds for dismissal, but it can be harder to eject a soldier who simply expresses fringey, hardline views.
  3. In one tricky moment, Burleson had to reckon for young viewers with the violence of the sport, after a Bears wide receiver was ejected for fighting.
  4. Taylor was ejected for spitting at Tampa Bay running back Michael Pittman.
  5. The Capitol police officers, overwhelmed by the crowds who broke into the Capitol building, took responsibility for leading lawmakers to safety and ejecting the relatively small groups of protesters who had gotten inside, the two people said.
  6. Hotels can deny entry, gyms can deny access, and restaurants can eject you without consequence.
  7. Your Dad recognized the cycle I was caught in and said, “Just push the eject button.”
  8. He either used a weapon that did not eject shell casings or he had the presence of mind to retrieve them before speeding away.
  9. Somehow Messinger, his copilot, the instructor pilot, and the navigator managed to eject from the airplane carrying the bombs.
  10. Parker was angry at Sequoia's Michael Moritz for having helped eject him from his previous company Plaxo.
  11. Ejectment is the action employed to eject or turn out a wrongful possessor and recover possession of land.
  12. I am young enough to have been annoyed, and altogether eject and renegate the whole idea of political affairs.
  13. The Pompilus' intention is plain: she wants to eject the Spider from her fortress and fling her some distance away.
  14. The huntress of Grey Worms induces a temporary torpor of the mandibles; the ravisher of Bees makes them eject their honey.
  15. Not being strong enough to eject his rival, Adolph sold his rights to John of Brabant, and hostilities broke out in 1283.