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expulsive
[ ik-spuhl-siv ]
adjective
- tending or serving to expel.
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 苍辞苍顎卐虫路辫耻濒顎僺颈惫别 adjective
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of expulsive1
Example Sentences
Some parts of the birth story I can only hope to forget: induction, complications, 鈥渇ailure to progress,鈥 interventions, fetal distress, 鈥減oor expulsive effort,鈥 tearing, episiotomy, hemorrhage.
In Los Piletones, too, residents were against being handed the official deeds, says Dos Santos 鈥 鈥渂ecause that could mean that people start selling their land, and then the neighbourhood is at the mercy of the market. And the market will have an expulsive effect on the poorest. The poorest people could start losing their homes and going to live in places even worse than this.鈥
In addition to the Alien franchise making its grand expulsive return this spring, doppelg盲nger release Life will likewise set an intelligent life form on a crew of unsuspecting astronauts trapped on a spacecraft.
In his spirited account of the coalition years, Clegg revealed how his relationship with Michael Gove soured to the point where Gove banned Lib Dem special advisers from entering the Department for Education, let loose his 鈥渟omewhat unhinged advisers鈥 to brief against Clegg, and on one particularly expulsive occasion 鈥渉id in the toilet to avoid speaking to David Laws鈥.
This is the expulsive part of Goldberg's personality and art: the paradoxical point where regulation meets 鈥 and briefly blends 鈥 with chaos.
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