Concept cluster: Activities > Exclusion or removal
v
To expel, especially from the mind.
v
To liberate oneself; to free oneself; to become free (from or of something or someone).
v
To deprive of a cap.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To render useless or void; to annul; to reject; to send away.
v
(UK, transitive, intransitive) To clean up.
v
(transitive) To turn (someone) aside; divert.
v
To remove, get rid of or erase, especially written or printed material, or data on a computer or other device.
v
(transitive) To sack employees from.
v
To disport.
n
(now rare) Discharge from office; dismissal.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To drive away from a camp.
v
(obsolete, Scotland) To prohibit; to forbid.
n
Deprivation of office; the fact or process of being fired from employment or stripped of rank.
v
(transitive) To destroy (someone or something) quickly and efficiently.
v
(transitive) To eject from a post; to displace.
v
To opt out of conventional society.
n
Withdrawal in order to make oneself inconspicuous; the making of oneself inconspicuous.
n
(generally) A casting out, an ejection.
n
One who, or that which, ejects or dispossesses.
v
(transitive) To exclude (from investigation or from further competition).
v
(obsolete, transitive) To remove (something) to a distance.
v
(intransitive) To be erased (have markings removed, have information removed, or be cleared of information).
v
(obsolete) To remove; to banish; to withdraw.
v
To cause (or help) to leave or withdraw from.
n
Withdrawal of troops or civils from a town, country, fortress, etc.
v
(transitive) To expel (one or more people) from their property; to force (one or more people) to move out.
v
(transitive) To bar (someone or something) from entering; to keep out.
n
(computing) Clipping of exfiltration (“covert extraction of data”). [(military) The process of exiting an area (usually behind enemy lines or in enemy territory).]
v
(transitive) To remove from membership.
v
Obsolete form of expel. [To eject or erupt.]
n
One who is expelled.
v
(transitive) To bring to a close; to terminate.
v
To expel.
n
The dismantling and removal of equipment, scenery, etc. when leaving a theater or television studio at the end of a production.
n
an escape from prison.
adj
Discharging an office or function.
v
(transitive, law, of text) To delete or remove; to strike.
v
(transitive) To expel from a caste.
n
A removal, especially of a ruler or government, by force or threat of force.
v
(transitive) To remove or relinquish the use of (something) little by little, either via discrete diminishing phases or (by extension) by continuous gradations; to remove in phases, or as if by phases (gradually).
adj
Having discharge authorized at the time of admission; short-term
v
(transitive, figuratively) Remove or send to a place far away.
v
(transitive) To murder.
v
(transitive) To cross an item out by drawing a straight line through it, as with a ruler.
v
(Internet slang, transitive) To not reply after seeing or reading the last message or email that someone has sent them.
n
An event that causes marginal constituents to be eliminated.
v
(transitive) To upturn convention from the foundation by undermining it (literally, to turn from beneath).
v
To remove something and put it in a different place.
v
To remove.
v
(Internet, informal, transitive) To expel (a user) permanently from a MUD or similar system, so that their account is deleted.
v
(transitive) To expel from membership of a congregation or church; to excommunicate.
v
(transitive) To scare out from a lair or a den.
v
(transitive, fandom slang) To bypass the spoiler warning on (a message) so as to view the contents.
v
(transitive) To expel; expulse; remove; release; rid.
v
To move out of a dwelling, either by choice or by eviction.
v
(intransitive, by extension) To cease to depend.
v
(transitive, by extension) To exclude someone from a narrative or history.
v
(transitive) To cut off funding for (a project).

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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