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  1. Dictionary
    expel
    /ɪkˈspɛl/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to force someone to leave a school, organization, or country: The new government has expelled all foreign diplomats. be expelled from My brother was expelled from school for bad behaviour. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Punishing someone by sending them somewhere else. banishment. deport someone to somewhere. deportable. deportation.

  3. The meaning of EXPEL is to force out : eject. How to use expel in a sentence. Did you know? Synonym Discussion of Expel.

  4. EXPEL meaning: 1. to force someone to leave a school, organization, or country: 2. to force air or liquid out of…. Learn more.

  5. Expel definition: to drive or force out or away; discharge or eject. See examples of EXPEL used in a sentence.

  6. To expel something means to force it out from a container or from your body. Daily brushing of the skin helps the skin expel toxins. [VERB noun] As the lungs exhale this waste, gas is expelled into the atmosphere. [be VERB -ed] Synonyms: drive out, discharge, throw out, force out More Synonyms of expel.

  7. It means that you are asked to leave and never come back. In other words, you have been kicked out. More benignly, expel can mean discharge: if you're having a water-fountain spitting-fight, you are hoping to expel water from your mouth in the direction of your opponent before they can get you.

  8. expel something (from something) (specialist) to force air or water out of a part of the body or from a container. Expel all the air from your chest.

  9. 1. To force or drive out: expel an invader. 2. To discharge from or as if from a receptacle: expelled a sigh of relief. 3. To deprive of membership or rights in an organization; force to leave: expelled the student from college for cheating.

  10. EXPEL definition: 1. to make someone leave a school, organization, or country because of their behaviour: 2. to…. Learn more.

  11. 1. If someone is expelled from a school or organization, they are officially told to leave because they have behaved badly. [...] 2. If people are expelled from a place, they are made to leave it, often by force. [...] 3. To expel something means to force it out from a container or from your body. [...] More. Conjugations of 'expel'