expulsión
81Expulsion of Poles by Germany — The partitions of Poland had ended the existence of a sovereign Polish state in the 18th century. With the rise of nationalism in the late 19th century, Poles faced increasing discrimination. The first deportation of 30,000 Poles from the German… …
82expulsión gaseosa — expr. ventosidad. ❙ «Por muy aliviada que se quedara la criaturita tras la expulsión gaseosa...» Felipe Navarro (Yale), Los machistas …
83Expulsion of Acadians — See Acadians, Expulsion of the …
84expulsion from the Republic of Lithuania — išsiuntimas iš Lietuvos Respublikos statusas Aprobuotas sritis viešasis administravimas apibrėžtis Priverstinis užsieniečio išvežimas ar išvesdinimas iš Lietuvos Respublikos teritorijos teisės aktų nustatyta tvarka. atitikmenys: angl. expulsion… …
85expulsion — noun The act of expelling or the state of being expelled. The scandal involved every member of the high schools football team resulting in a flurry of expulsions, starting with the quarterback. Ant: impulsion See Also: expel …
86expulsion — Synonyms and related words: banishment, blowout, booting out, cashiering, clearance, communication, conduction, contagion, convection, deconsecration, defenestration, defrocking, delivery, deportation, deposal, deposition, deprivation, detachment …
87expulsion — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. ejection, eviction, ousting, dislodgement, dismissal; banishment, exile, deportation, expatriation, ostracism; excretion, discharge. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. ejection, suspension, purge, banishment;… …
88Expulsion — Ex|pul|si|on 〈f.; Gen.: , Pl.: en; Med.〉 Abführung, Austreibung [Etym.: <lat. expulsio »Vertreibung«] …
89Expulsion — Ex|pulsio̱n [zu lat. expellere, expulsum = heraustreiben] w; , en: Entfernung, Abführung (z. B. von Eingeweidewürmern) …
90Expulsion — Ex|pul|si|on die; , en <aus spätlat. expulsio »Vertreibung« zu lat. expellere »heraustreiben«> Entfernung, Abführung (z. B. von Eingeweidewürmern; Med.) …