exul

exul

(ˈɛksʊl)
n
(Law) an exile, a person who has been banished
vb (tr)
(Law) to exile, to banish
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Effect of three nickel salts on germinating seed of Grevillea exul var.
Table 2) Florida Record: Johnson 1913, FSCA Synonymy; Tabanus variegatus Fabricius, 1805; Tabanus tectus Osten Sacken, 1876; Tabanus exul Osten Sacken, 1878
P 0 0 0 0 0 Aegla araucaniensis P 0 15 54 36 129 Aegla manni P 0 54 0 0 0 Isopoda Helenas exul CG 0 0 3 15 6 Amphipoda Hyalella sp.
El exul (desterrado) romano, era exiliado frecuentemente a una ubicacion especifica por fuera del imperio, en la cual quienes ostentaban el poder se veian obligados a aceptar su presencia.
In one (VII) of his letters to Emperor Henry VII, (3) written in 1311 when the emperor had first come to Italy, Dante, as a Florentinus et exul immeritus, rebukes the emperor's delay in besieging the city of Brescia and urges him to action.
19) that Jason "per urbes erret ignotas egens / exul pauens inuisus incerti laris, / iam notus hospes limen alienum expetat" (may wander through unknown cities, destitute, fearing, a hated exile of an uncertain house; already an infamous stranger, let him seek out an alien doorstep; ll.
Hugo Grotius's Adam in Adamus Exul makes the same error of judgement by seeing 'two loves [...] on the one side God, on the other Eve: both are great' (ll.