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expelled

/ik-spel/US // ɪkˈspɛl //UK // (ɪkˈspɛl) //

被驱逐出境,驱逐出境,被驱逐,被开除

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    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.

Synonyms & Antonyms

verbthrow out, banish

Examples

  • Nevertheless, border officials tested unaccompanied children seeking asylum — and expelled them even if their results were negative.

  • The superconducting fluid also expels magnetic fields — an effect that could allow magnetically levitating vehicles to float frictionlessly above superconducting rails.

  • The team also applied an oscillating magnetic field to the material, and showed that, when the material became a superconductor, it expelled that magnetic field from its interior, another sign of superconductivity.

  • The Commission on Presidential Debates has promised to expel anyone from the debate hall in Utah who does not follow a mandate to wear a mask indoors.

  • Last month, Cai Xia, a former teacher at the Party’s top academy, was also expelled from the Party after her denouncement of Xi as a “mafia boss” in a recording leaked online.

  • Grimm could be forced from office if he is expelled by a two-thirds vote of the House.

  • Interestingly, if Grimm is expelled, he is not legally prohibited from running in the special election for his seat.

  • We do know with great precision what happened to the expelled student.

  • He left, but many other mercenaries stayed, and two years later they were executed or expelled after a mutiny in Stanleyville.

  • If you are found by a committee of students to be guilty of violating the Honor Code, you are expelled.

  • They affirmed it was an antidote to all poison; that it expelled rheums, sour humours, and obstructions of all kinds.

  • Likewise a large part of the Japanese have been expelled, so that for a long time there have not been so few of them here as now.

  • Rash Americans were apt to say the danger was over now that the French were "expelled from Canada."

  • A member who has been wrongfully expelled may be restored by a mandamus proceeding issued by a court.

  • The general assembly of Corsica, consisting of 1,009 delegates, unanimously expelled the Bonaparte family.