exit
21exit — In stage directions the correct style is Exit Macbeth (when one person leaves the stage) and Exeunt Banquo and Fleance (when more than one person leaves). The two forms are the third person singular and third person plural present tense of the… …
22exit — [ek′sit, eg′zit] n. [L exitus, orig. pp. of exire, to go out < ex , out + ire, to go < IE base * ei > YEAR, Sans ḗmi, Goth iddja (I went)] 1. an actor s departure from the stage 2. a going out; departure 3. a way out; doorway or passage… …
23Exit — (lat.), er geht ab; vgl. Exeunt …
24Exit — (lat.), er tritt ab; Mehrzahl Exeunt (s.d.) …
25Exit — Exit, lat., tritt ab …
26Exit. — Exit. † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Ecclesiastical Abbreviations ► Abbreviation used in Apostolic Rescripts Existit ( Exists ) The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Nihil Obstat. 1910 …
27EXIT — a British organization which aims to change the law against helping seriously ill people to die if they wish to. The organization gives advice to such people and their families. The Hemlock Society is a similar organization in the US …
28exit — exit* <lat. ; »er, sie geht hinaus, tritt ab«, 3. Pers. Sing. von exire »hinausgehen«> er, sie geht hinaus, tritt ab (als Regieanweisung beim Theater) …
29exit — ► NOUN 1) a way out of a building, room, or passenger vehicle. 2) an act of leaving. 3) a place for traffic to leave a major road or roundabout. ► VERB (exited, exiting) 1) go out of or leave a place. 2) …
30exit — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 way out ADJECTIVE ▪ back, rear ▪ side ▪ east, south, etc. ▪ He left through the south exit …