exiled 的 2 个定义
- expulsion from one's native land by authoritative decree.
- the fact or state of such expulsion: to live in exile.
- a person banished from his or her native land.
- (6)
ex·iled, ex·il·ing.
- to expel or banish from his or her country; expatriate.
- to separate from country, home, etc.: Disagreements exiled him from his family.
exiled 近义词
deport from place
更多exiled例句
- It’s a story about Ireland and exile and carrying the ghosts of family and home through time.
- Michael then abandoned his profession and left the country, heading for England and a life of permanent, hopefully peaceful, exile.
- That fear has been significantly reduced since Gammeh’s defeat and subsequent exile.
- Some exiles who used their wits to enter America were collaborators, even war criminals.
- For one, they’re without their head coach-in-exile, Dan Hughes, after he wasn’t approved, for medical reasons, to enter the bubble.
- A twinned, imagined narrative of a fictitious Fidel Castro and a Miami exile intent on assassinating him.
- After Olympic boxer Guillermo Rigondeux defected, his family suffered a form of domestic exile.
- Both the Republicans in Congress and the American-Cuban community in exile have been speaking out against the warming relations.
- He was eventually allowed to leave, but he was forced to resign as ambassador and now lives in Washington, effectively in exile.
- Instead of wallowing in comedy exile, Slate was earning a book deal.
- The foster-child remained behind to share the hut of the political exile.
- The exile and the maiden, in short, fell in love with each other, and they mutually vowed never to be parted but by force.
- He accordingly betook himself to London, where he had social resources which would, perhaps, make exile endurable.
- He never returned, but died in England on June 3, 1780, an unhappy and a homesick exile from the country which he loved.
- The exile too, far from home and kindred smokes on as he muses of happier hours gone never to return.