expel 的定义
ex·pelled, ex·pel·ling.
- to drive or force out or away; discharge or eject: to expel air from the lungs; to expel an invader from a country.
- to cut off from membership or relations: to expel a student from a college.
expel 近义词
discharge
throw out, banish
更多expel例句
- Once people are part of the service, our leadership must be ruthless in discipling and expelling those who drift in this direction.
- Water vapor expelled by the wearer’s body can fit between those scales and is absorbed by the hollow interior.
- Now Hogg is calling on House Republicans to strip Greene of her committee assignments and expel her from Congress.
- The tech titans have already booted dozens of conservatives off social media, and if they have their way, half the House Republican conference will be expelled from Congress.
- My preferred method to expel excess moisture is to return the drained vegetables to the pot over low heat and stir for a minute or two before proceeding.
- They wanted to expel the demons which they believed caused impure thoughts.
- They expel difficult students and refuse to admit students that public schools have to admit—like kids with disabilities.
- Simultaneously, a brigade of mercenaries and Congolese soldiers would seal off the city and expel the guerrillas.
- After investigating the case and bringing together all of the evidence I moved to expel him from the Senate.
- As an Ebola patient slips from bad to worse to dire, he can expel as many as two and a half gallons of effluvia a day.
- The power to expel members is incident to every society or association unless organized primarily for gain.
- According to the Meaux chronicler, he proceeded to expel them; but the particular acts are not recorded.
- It never will be popular until the light which men hate shall expel the darkness which they love.
- The foreign governments rained threats on the Federal Diet to make it expel the refugees.
- Early in the fourteenth century the Irish septs united so far as to form a joint effort to expel the English.