|
DISMISSAL |
Expulsion |
|
REMOVAL |
Expulsion |
|
EXILE |
Expulsion |
|
EJECTION |
Expulsion |
|
|
EVICTION |
Expulsion |
|
DEPORTATION |
Expulsion from country |
|
BANNITION |
The act of expulsion. |
|
REEXPULSION |
Renewed or repeated expulsion. |
|
|
FLATULENCE |
Expulsion of excess gas; pompous language |
|
SNEEZE |
Involuntary expulsion of air from the nose |
|
EXTRUSION |
The act of thrusting or pushing out; a driving out;
expulsion. |
|
DELIVERY |
The act of giving birth; parturition; the expulsion or
extraction of a fetus and its membranes. |
|
EJECTMENT |
A casting out; a dispossession; an expulsion; ejection;
as, the ejectment of tenants from their homes. |
|
EXSICCATION |
The act of operation of drying; evaporation or
expulsion of moisture; state of being dried up; dryness. |
|
ECBOLIC |
A drug, as ergot, which by exciting uterine contractions
promotes the expulsion of the contents of the uterus. |
|
WHIFF |
A sudden expulsion of air from the mouth; a quick puff or
slight gust, as of air or smoke. |
|
HOCKDAY |
A holiday commemorating the expulsion of the Danes,
formerly observed on the second Tuesday after Easter; -- called also
hocktide. |
|
DEPOPULATE |
To deprive of inhabitants, whether by death or by
expulsion; to reduce greatly the populousness of; to dispeople; to
unpeople. |
|
ABORTION |
The act of giving premature birth; particularly, the
expulsion of the human fetus prematurely, or before it is capable of
sustaining life; miscarriage. |
|
GARGLE |
To wash or rinse, as the mouth or throat, particular the
latter, agitating the liquid (water or a medicinal preparation) by an
expulsion of air from the lungs. |
|
COUGH |
A sudden, noisy, and violent expulsion of air from the
chest, caused by irritation in the air passages, or by the reflex
action of nervous or gastric disorder, etc. |
|
SUPPRESSION |
...tion;
as, suppression of urine; -- used in contradiction to retention, which
signifies that the secretion or excretion is retained without
ex... |
|
LAUGHTER |
...usually attended
by a sonorous and interrupted expulsion of air from the lungs. See
Laugh, v. i. ... |
|
CALCINATION |
... or
rendering it friable by the action of heat, esp. by the expulsion of
some volatile matter, as when carbonic and acid is expelled from
car... |
|
DEHISCENCE |
...llicles, as in the ovaries of animals, for the
expulsion of their contents. ... |