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  1. Dictionary
    ex·pel
    [ikˈspel]
    verb
    expel (verb) · expels (third person present) · expelled (past tense) · expelled (past participle) · expelling (present participle)
    1. deprive (someone) of membership of or involvement in a school or other organization:
      "she was expelled from school"
      • force (someone) to leave a place, especially a country:
        "eight diplomats were expelled from Norway for espionage"
      • force out or eject (something), especially from the body:
        "she expelled a shuddering breath"
    Origin
    late Middle English: from Latin expellere, from ex- ‘out’ + pellere ‘to drive’.
    Translate expel to
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  3. Force out or drive out
    Expel means to force out or drive out123. It can refer to pushing out air, liquid, or even a person from a place or organization.
    Learn more:
    expel verb [T] (AIR/LIQUID) to force air or liquid out of something: She took a deep breath, then expelled the air in short blasts. expel something from something When you breathe out, you expel air from your lungs.
    dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/expel
    To expel is to drive out, and its usual noun is expulsion. Expel is similar to eject, but expel suggests pushing out while eject suggests throwing out. Also, ejecting may only be temporary: the player ejected from a game may be back tomorrow, but the student expelled from school is probably out forever.
    www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/expel
    ex·pel (ĭk-spĕl′) tr.v. ex·pelled, ex·pel·ling, ex·pels 1. To force or drive out: expel an invader. 2. To discharge from or as if from a receptacle: expelled a sigh of relief.
    www.thefreedictionary.com/expel
     
  4. Expel Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

     
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