different between expel vs expulsionism
expel
English
Etymology
Late Middle English: from Latin expellere, from ex- (“out”) +? pellere (“to drive”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?k?sp?l/
- Rhymes: -?l
Verb
expel (third-person singular simple present expels, present participle expelling, simple past and past participle expelled)
- To eject or erupt.
- (obsolete) To fire (a bullet, arrow etc.).
- (transitive) To remove from membership.
- Synonyms: drive away, drive out, force out
- (transitive) To deport.
Synonyms
- fordrive, turf out
Antonyms
- impel
Related terms
- expulsion
Translations
expel From the web:
- what expel mean
- what expeller pressed mean
- what expels noxious fumes from a laboratory
- what expels a mature ovum
- what expelliarmus do
- what's expeller pressed
- what's expeller pressed coconut oil
- what's expelled from school
expulsionism
English
Etymology
expulsion +? -ism
Noun
expulsionism (uncountable)
- The belief that foreigners should be expelled.
Related terms
- expulsionist
expulsionism From the web:
- what expressionism art
- what expressionism means
- what expressionism music
- what expressionism history
- what is expressionism in theatre
- what is expressionism in literature
- what is expressionism in film
- what is expressionism in music brainly
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- expel vs expulsionism
- expelling vs expulsion
- expelled vs expulsion
- expulsion vs expellee
- exclusive vs excluded
- exclude vs exclusionarily
- exclusion vs excluded
- exclude vs exclusions
- exclusionary vs excluded
- exclude vs exclusionary
- ambitious vs ambitionist
- ambitionist vs taxonomy
- motivation vs ambition
- ambitious vs ambition
- covet vs ambition
- ambition vs ambitionlessness
- ambition vs unaspiring
- ambition vs unambition
- amazement vs ambition
- ambition vs anger