expel
驱逐
definition
verb
she was expelled from school
deprive (someone) of membership of or involvement in a school or other organization.
translation of 'expel'
verb
摈,
黜,
驱逐,
排,
驱,
遣,
开除,
取消比赛资格,
驱逐出境,
赶出,
逐,
革,
摒,
逐出,
驱遣
example
He would like to deport and 'expel' people who are French, people who would otherwise vote in elections.
Eventually the king was forced to 'expel' her from the country.
Like peppermint, it helps your body 'expel' gas, but it also stimulates your digestive juices.
Yoga helps your body reabsorb and 'expel' gas by stimulating peristalsis, the muscle contractions that eliminate waste.
It turns out that some species of penguin can 'expel' their feces with such force that it can fly 40 cm.
After he won the presidency in 1990, the opposition joined with the Army to overthrow him and 'expel' him from the country.
Small but prolonged rises in sea temperature force coral colonies to 'expel' their symbiotic, food-producing algae, a process known as bleaching.
When you take in those extra salts, your body will need to 'expel' them as quickly as possible.
That my body wants to 'expel' the dust of the past as quickly as it inhales it seems to me an entirely healthy mechanism.
Most non-government schools have much wider powers to select or 'expel' students, and select and dismiss teachers and other staff, than government schools.
If there is one thing we could do to give this, and other cities, a sensible future, it would be to banish, 'expel' , deport, and forever exile this noxious device and all its associated poisons.
The party itself was forced to 'expel' three members and sanction one other.
So, once his races are over, his main priority will be to 'expel' them from his body as fast and efficiently as possible.
Security forces had allied with extreme loyalists to 'expel' families from their homes.
Viruses in your throat or chest also stimulate your cough reflex, which helps your body 'expel' the mucus and the virus, he says.
That means the possibility of using the threat of force to force them to give up their weapons and 'expel' the radical organization.
This champion of samurai who would overthrow the Shogunate and 'expel' the barbarians became the devoted follower of the elite shogunal official.
Acute diarrhea is an important defense mechanism that enables your body to 'expel' foreign bacteria and parasites quickly.
Unless they are 'expelled' from your body, they add to your weight.
UEFA's disciplinary body could have 'expelled' the Italian club from European competition next season.
The immune system does this work, targeting and breaking down outworn or foreign materials and 'expelling' them from the body.
The chair's legs squeaked against the floor as she pushed it away and coughed, her body 'expelling' the pill across to the far side of the table.
Persons are not 'expelled' from universities for attending non-violent demonstrations.
Some 800,000 people were 'expelled' and several hundreds of thousands internally displaced.
You know how wretched it is to eat something you shouldn't have and spend the next day and a half miserably 'expelling' it from your body.
Russian forces 'expelled' the older scientists and held the younger ones as prisoners of war.
As with a foreign object, sometimes the body rejects a body piercing and 'expels' it or causes it to migrate.
He has been based here since he was 'expelled' from Sudan, and forbidden entry to his homeland of Saudi Arabia.
He became involved in the underground Croatian nationalist movement, for which he was 'expelled' from party and office in 1967.
Only last month the south Asian neighbours 'expelled' each other's diplomats over accusations of spying.
Credits: Google Translate