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    E·ject
    /əˈjek(t)/

    verb

    • 1. force or throw (something) out, typically in a violent or sudden way: "many types of rock are ejected from volcanoes as solid, fragmentary material" Similar emitspew outpour outdischargeOpposite take in
  2. [transitive, intransitive] eject (something) when you eject a disk, tape, etc., or when it ejects, it comes out of the machine after you have pressed a button Word Origin late Middle English: from Latin eject- ‘thrown out’, from the verb eicere , from e- (variant of ex- ) ‘out’ + jacere ‘to throw’.

  3. Eject definition, to drive or force out; expel, as from a place or position: The police ejected the hecklers from the meeting. See more.

  4. 3 [transitive, intransitive] eject (something) when you eject a disk, etc., or when it ejects, it comes out of the machine after you have pressed a button; 4 [intransitive] (of a pilot) to escape from an aircraft that is going to crash, sometimes using an ejection seat The pilot managed to eject moments before the plane crashed.

  5. EJECT definition: 1. to make someone leave a place, usually using force: 2. to come out of a machine when a button…. Learn more.

  6. eject meaning: 1. to make someone leave a place, usually using force: 2. to come out of a machine when a button…. Learn more.

  7. Apr 4, 2024 · eject in American English. (ɪˈdʒekt) transitive verb. 1. to drive or force out; expel, as from a place or position. The police ejected the hecklers from the meeting. 2. to dismiss, as from office or occupancy. 3.

  8. Eject definition: to drive or force out; expel, as from a place or position. See examples of EJECT used in a sentence.

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