A person who is exiled is commonly referred to as an "exile." This term denotes someone who has been forced to leave their home country, often for political reasons or persecution. Exiles may live in foreign countries and may be unable to return to their homeland due to fear of retribution or legal consequences.
A person who was exiled to Australia in 1788 were called convicts.
An exile, or an outcast ( not to be confused with outcaste, which means something else). Banished would be another word.
Exiled or banished.
No. Christian tradition says that the Apostle John was exiled to Patmos. The Book of Revelation was signed by a person called John, who said that he was writing from Patmos. In the belief that this person must have been the apostle John, Christians began to wonder how and why John went to Patmos, and gradually developed the tradition that he had been exiled to the island.
Tartarus
The correct spelling is outcast (an exiled person).
exiled
No, 'Exiled' cards go to what used to be called the 'removed from play' zone. A card that is exiled from hand or battlefield, for example, never hits the graveyard, and cards in the exiled zone can't be affected by cards that look at or refer to graveyard cards.
Probably King Henry the Third, or Charles the second
The person who leaves without being exiled will come back without being called.
A perpetual exiled person ,or an outcast.
In fair Verona, where we lay our scene....this is part of the prologue at the very beginning of Romeo and Juliet and it says the setting is in Verona, Italy where the story takes place. When Romeo gets exiled he goes to a place called Mantua.