oust

listen to the pronunciation of oust
English - English
To expel; to remove

The protesters became so noisy that they were finally ousted from the meeting.

to eject
{v} to cast or put out, vacate, take away
{n} a kiln to dry hops or malt on
remove from a position or office; "The chairman was ousted after he misappropriated funds"
To take away; to remove
remove and replace; "The word processor has ousted the typewriter"
remove from a position or office; "The chairman was ousted after he misappropriated funds" remove and replace; "The word processor has ousted the typewriter
If someone is ousted from a position of power, job, or place, they are forced to leave it. The leaders have been ousted from power by nationalists Last week they tried to oust him in a parliamentary vote of no confidence. the ousted government. + ousting oust·ing The ousting of his predecessor was one of the most dramatic coups the business world had seen in years. = removal. to force someone out of a position of power, especially so that you can take their place oust sb from sth (ouster, from obstare )
{f} drive out; expel; evict (Law)
To eject; to turn out
remove and replace; "The word processor has ousted the typewriter
ousted
past of oust
ousting
present participle of oust
ousting
the act of ejecting someone or forcing them out
ousts
third-person singular of oust
oust
Favorites