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eject e∙ject / ɪˈdʒɛkt ; ɪˈdʒekt /
◙verb
1. [T] to make someone leave a place or building by using force
• 〔用武力〕驱逐,赶出:
»eject sb from sth
»The demonstrators were ejected from the hall.
示威者被赶出大厅。
2. [T] to make someone leave a job or position very quickly
• 强迫〔某人〕离职:
»eject sb from sth
»420 workers have been ejected from their jobs with no warning.
420 名工人在没有受到警告的情况下被迫离职。
3. [T] to suddenly send something out
• 喷射, 射出:
»Two engines cut out and the plane started to eject fuel as it lost height.
两个发动机突然熄火,飞机下降时开始喷出燃料。
4. [I] if a pilot ejects, he or she escapes from a plane, using an ejector seat because it is going to crash
• 〔飞行员从将要坠毁的飞机中〕弹射出来
5. [I,T] if you eject a TAPE or DISK , or if it ejects, it comes out of a machine after you have pressed a particular button
• (将磁带或光盘从机器中)弹出
♦ejection / ɪˈdʒɛkʃən ; ɪˈdʒekʃən / noun [C,U]
1. [VN] ~ sb (from sth) (formal) to force sb to leave a place
驱逐;逐出;赶出
SYN throw out :
Police ejected a number of violent protesters from the hall.
警察将一些暴力抗议者赶出了会议厅。
2. [VN] ~ sth (from sth) to push sth out suddenly and with a lot of force
喷出;喷射;排出:
Used cartridges are ejected from the gun after firing.
空弹壳在射击后从枪里弹出。
3. [V] (of a pilot) to escape from an aircraft that is going to crash, sometimes using an ejector seat
(飞行员在飞机坠毁前从弹射座椅)弹出
4. [VN , V] when you eject a tape, disk, etc., or when it ejects, it comes out of the machine after you have pressed a button
(按键后磁带、磁盘)弹出;使弹出
• ejec·tion / iˈdʒekʃn / noun [U, C]
eject verb
push/send sth out
• ADVERB forcibly | physically | summarily (esp. BrE) They were summarily ~ed by the security guard.
• PREPOSITION from He was forcibly ~ed from the restaurant.
[img][/img] make an emergency exit
• ADVERB safely
• PREPOSITION from All the crew members ~ed safely from the plane.
Eject is used with these nouns as the subject: pilot
Eject is used with these nouns as the object: cassette, disc
eject
I. \ə̇ˈjekt, ēˈ-\ transitive verb
(-ed/-ing/-s)
Etymology: Middle English ejecten, from Latin ejectus, past participle of eicere, from e- + -icere (from jacere to throw) — more at jet
1.
a. : to drive (as a person) out especially by physical force : expel
< he was being ejected for taunting the pianist — Brooks Atkinson >
b. : to deprive of membership or of a position or office : oust
< the membership ejected the chairman by acclamation >
c. : to evict from property : dispossess
< ejected for nonpayment of rent >
2.
a. : to throw or force out from within
< a mechanism that ejects the empty cases from the gun >
b. : to throw off
< an electron ejected from an atom of copper >
c. obsolete : emit
< every look … mine eyes ejects — Ben Jonson >
Synonyms:
eject, expel, oust, evict, and dismiss can mean, in common, to force or thrust (a thing or person) out. eject carries the strongest implication of throwing out from within
< cones of material ejected from the volcanoes — W.E.Swinton >
< the solar system had been formed out of matter ejected from the sun — S.F.Mason >
< no solid bank of smoke ejected itself from the breastworks — Kenneth Roberts >
< a roaring fire ejecting sparks — T.S.Eliot >
< cowboys forcibly eject the farmers from their places in line — American Guide Series: Texas >
expel, stressing a thrusting out or driving away, implies more generally a voluntary compulsion than eject, indicating more generally an intent to get permanently rid of
< expel the air from the lungs >
< the fish and the bird, which expel the egg from the body — H.M.Parshley >
< he was arrested … then expelled from the city with the warning never to come back — Current Biography >
< expelled from his seat in the Senate for plotting with the British — R.B.Morris >
oust implies removal or dispossession by the power of a law or the exercise of force or compulsion
< to oust squatters from his property — American Guide Series: Pennsylvania >
< the first explorers were the Genoese, who had been ousted from the Levant trade by the Venetians — S.F.Mason >
< Ferdinand … ousted the local king from Navarre — Francis Hackett >
evict now means to turn out (of house and home, one's place of business, or the like) by legal or equally effective means, commonly for nonpayment of rent
< after two months the landlord had the tenants evicted for rowdyism and destruction of property besides nonpayment >
< Roger Williams, rebel against the Puritans and evicted by them from the sacred confines of Massachusetts — R.W.Hatch >
< thousands of crofters were evicted to make way for large sheep farms — London Calling >
dismiss stresses a getting rid of (something) by refusing it further consideration, ejecting it from the thoughts, or taking steps to ensure its no longer annoying one
< nonviolence as a political weapon … should not be dismissed lightly — African Abstracts >
< a very downright sort of Yankee, given to dismissing people who disagreed with him — Charlton Laird >
< dismiss an enemy by having him deported >
II. \ˈēˌjekt\ noun
(-s)
: projection 8
西班牙语
eject
[e·ject || ɪ'dʒekt]
v. eyectar, expeler, expulsar, expulsar a presión, eyacular
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