- eject from
- v. 驅逐出, 排斥出
English-Chinese dictionary. 2013.
English-Chinese dictionary. 2013.
eject from possession — index dispossess Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
eject — v. (D; intr., tr.) to eject from (to eject from a disabled plane; they were ejected from the room for disorderly conduct) * * * [ɪ dʒekt] (D; intr., tr.) to eject from (to eject from a disabled plane; they were ejected from the room for dis… … Combinatory dictionary
eject — vb Eject, expel, oust, evict, dismiss mean to force or thrust something or someone out. Eject, although it is the comprehensive term of this group and is often interchangeable with any of the others, carries the strongest implication of throwing… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Eject (Transformers) — Eject is the name of a fictional character from the various Transformers universes.Transformers: Generation 1Transformers character name =Eject caption =deletable image caption affiliation =Autobot subgroup =Communications function =Electronic… … Wikipedia
Eject — E*ject , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Ejected}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Ejecting}.] [L. ejectus, p. p. of ejicere; e out + jacere to throw. See {Jet} a shooting forth.] 1. To expel; to dismiss; to cast forth; to thrust or drive out; to discharge; as, to eject a … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
eject — [ē jekt′, ijekt] vt. [< L ejectus, pp. of ejicere, to throw out < e , out (see EX 1) + jacere, to throw (see JET1)] 1. to throw out; cast out; expel; emit; discharge [the chimney ejects smoke] 2. to drive out; evict [to eject a heckler] … English World dictionary
eject — /i jekt/ vt: dispossess Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. eject … Law dictionary
eject — i jekt vt to force out or expel from within <blood ejected from the heart (S. F. Mason)> ejec·tion jek shən n … Medical dictionary
eject — mid 15c., from L. eiectus thrown out, pp. of eicere throw out, from ex out (see EX (Cf. ex )) + icere, comb. form of iacere to throw (see JET (Cf. jet) (v.)). Related: Ejected; ejecting … Etymology dictionary
eject — ► VERB 1) force or throw out violently or suddenly. 2) (of a pilot) escape from an aircraft by means of an ejection seat. 3) compel (someone) to leave a place. DERIVATIVES ejection noun ejector noun. ORIGIN Latin eicere throw out , from jacere … English terms dictionary
eject — e|ject [ıˈdʒekt] v [Date: 1400 1500; : Latin; Origin: ejectus, past participle of eicere to throw out ] 1.) [T] to make someone leave a place or building by using force eject sb from sth ▪ The demonstrators were ejected from the hall. 2.) [T] to… … Dictionary of contemporary English