"expel' means about the same as "eject".
The e means 'out' and ject is from the French word 'jette' meaning throw. so eject means throw out.
It means thrown out, both literally and figuratively.
Words that might have that use are the verbs discard, ditch, eject, evict, jettison, pitch, or toss.Defenestrate = to throw or eject from a window or opening. The word is metaphorically but once applied literally to people, notably the Defenestration of Prague (1618), where officials were "thrown out of office", literally!
jectpackrejectprojectinjectdeject
Superb is another word for excellent. Superb is another word for excellent.
One word that fits this definition is eject. Another would be trash.
erase
My VCR will no longer eject tapes.
The noun forms of the verb to eject are ejector, ejection, and the gerund, ejecting.
expel
The pilot had to eject from the plane because it was in a flat spin with the engines burned out.
To "oust," perhaps?
Hurl, eject, catapult.
You press their eject button.
The e means 'out' and ject is from the French word 'jette' meaning throw. so eject means throw out.
eject, reject, project, deject
Eject, evict and expel