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[ US /ɪkˈspəɫʃən/ ]
[ UK /ɛkspˈʌlʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. the act of forcing out someone or something
    the child's expulsion from school
    the ejection of troublemakers by the police
  2. squeezing out by applying pressure
    the expulsion of pus from the pimple
    an unexpected extrusion of toothpaste from the bottom of the tube
  3. the act of expelling or projecting or ejecting

How To Use expulsion In A Sentence

  • The club faces expulsion from the football league.
  • Afghans and from the Nizam, but what he most counted on for the expulsion of the English from the Carnatic was a force of thirty thousand French soldiers. History of the English People, Volume VIII (of 8) Modern England, 1760-1815
  • He could avoid expulsion and imprisonment if the full 435-member House decides to enforce censure, a reprimand or fines.
  • These structural changes were aggravated by the expulsion of large peasant masses, which increased poverty and unemployment in big cities.
  • The hypertonicity of the radiopaque agent draws fluid into the bowel to facilitate passage and expulsion of the tenacious meconium.
  • Fast wind of video-tape, then the final expulsion of the usurers. PASSION IN THE PEAK
  • The apostle's anointing was in order to heal the disease; the popish anointing is for the expulsion of the relics of sin, and to enable the soul (as they pretend) the better to combat with the powers of the air. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation)
  • It motivated the expulsion; it financed the colonization; it secured the property rights by which peasants came to hold land in fee-simple tenure.
  • The idea that the intervention was intended to halt mass expulsions and genocide has always been a convenient fantasy.
  • Buying a car or cheating in a business deal etc. is cause for immediate expulsion.
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