expellable

listen to the pronunciation of expellable
English - Turkish

Definition of expellable in English Turkish dictionary

expel
defetmek
expel
{f} sürmek
expel
kovmak
expel
{f} dışarı atmak
expel
{f} sınırdışı etmek
expel
çıkarmak
expel
sürgün etmek
expel
aforozlamak
expel
attırmak
expel
(Askeri) tart etmek
expel
atmak
expel
kov

Ben okuldan kovuldum. - I've been expelled from school.

O, arkadaşını öptüğü için yaz kampından kovuldu. - She was expelled from the summer camp because she kissed her friend.

expel
(Askeri) KOVMAK, SÜRMEK, ÇIKARMAK, DEFETMEK
expel
azletmek
expel
defeden ilaç
expel
kov/çıkar
expel
expellant
expel
tardetmek
expel
çıkaran
English - English
{a} that may be expelled or driven out
Capable of being expelled or driven out
{s} able to be expelled, may be sent away, able to be banished
expel
To remove from membership
expel
To deport
expel
To fire (a bullet, arrow etc.)

But to the ground the idle quarrell fell: / Then he another and another did expell.

expel
{v} to drive out, force away, banish, eject
expel
If someone is expelled from a school or organization, they are officially told to leave because they have behaved badly. More than five-thousand secondary school students have been expelled for cheating. a boy expelled from school for making death threats to his teacher
expel
To eject or erupt
expel
force to leave or move out; "He was expelled from his native country"
expel
remove from a position or office; "The chairman was ousted after he misappropriated funds"
expel
put out or expel from a place; "The child was expelled from the classroom"
expel
cause to flee; "rout out the fighters from their caves"
expel
If people are expelled from a place, they are made to leave it, often by force. An American academic was expelled from the country yesterday They were told at first that they should simply expel the refugees
expel
To drive or force out from that within which anything is contained, inclosed, or situated; to eject; as, to expel air from a bellows
expel
To discharge; to shoot
expel
force to leave or move out; "He was expelled from his native country
expel
To drive away from one's country; to banish
expel
To expel something means to force it out from a container or from your body. As the lungs exhale this waste, gas is expelled into the atmosphere
expel
put out or expel from a place; "The child was expelled from the classroom" force to leave or move out; "He was expelled from his native country
expel
To cut off from further connection with an institution of learning, a society, and the like; as, to expel a student or member
expel
{f} exile, eject, drive out, banish
expel
eliminate (substances) from the body
expel
To keep out, off, or away; to exclude
expellable

    Hyphenation

    ex·pel·la·ble

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    [ ik-'spel ] (transitive verb.) 14th century. Middle English expellen, from Latin expellere, from ex- + pellere to drive; more at FELT.
Favorites