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Exit - definition of exit by The Free Dictionary ex·it (ĕg′zĭt, ĕk′sĭt) n 1 The act of going away or out 2 A passage or way out: an emergency exit in a theater; took the second exit on the throughway 3 The departure of a performer from the stage 4 Death v ex·it·ed, ex·it·ing, ex·its v intr To make one's exit; depart v tr 1 To go out of; leave: exited the plane through a
exit verb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . . Word Origin mid 16th cent (as a stage direction): from Latin exit ‘he or she goes out’, third person singular present tense of exire, from ex-‘out’ + ire ‘go’ The noun (late 16th cent ) is from Latin exitus ‘going out’, from the verb exire, and the other verb uses (early 17th cent ) derive from it
exit - Wiktionary, the free dictionary Mr Ogilvie, surgeon, deposed that he, in company with Mr Andrews, had examined the body of George Catt, and found upon him a gun-shot wound, which had entered the right cheek, passed through the mouth and lower part of the brain, making its exit at the posterior and lower part of the bone on the left side of the head (specifically, drama) The action of an actor leaving a scene or the stage
exit | meaning of exit in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English . . . From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Related topics: Building, Roads exit ex‧it 1 ˈeɡzɪt, ˈeksɪt S3 W3 noun [countable] 1 TB a door or space through which you can leave a public room, building etc We made for the nearest exit an exit door Two men were blocking her exit emergency fire exit (= a special door used only when there is a fire etc) 2 [usually singular] LEAVE A