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expediate

v. 1) To use Expedia.com 2) To celebrate the check you get if someone books your hotel for less, usually by having a fun night.
Husband: "Look dear, we got our check from Expedia! I guess someone booked our hotel for less!"

Wife: "Wow Jim, that's great, we'll go expediate after dinner tonight!"
by steelers172 May 13, 2010
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expatriate myopia

a form of blindness resulting from having travelled to a remote part of the planet, under very difficult conditions, only to realise that there's a tour group there. Expatriate myopia causes you to not see the tour bus, the group or any individual that may remotely come from where you're from. It's often accompanied by deafness. Usually contracted by backpackers...
Diane developed expatriate myopia in Bakit Lawang, having arrive there after a 23 hour bus trip, only to find that every room was taken by Australian Year 12 students on schoolies.
by Normally Light Fingered February 3, 2010
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expatriate

To kill by removing someone's skin, therefore making them melt. Extremely gross, and you should just use a gun.
Bob: Hey Kenthar, do you want to hear about how I expatriated this guy the other night?
Kenthar: How did you get in here?
by Kenthar October 12, 2003
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expatiated

Another term for expedite, often used erroneously by management.
Seems like every ER is expatiated these days.
by DNVOPS October 16, 2008
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expadite

The teacher had to expadite the syllabus to embark on serious revision.
by Hillary Mulunda March 31, 2021
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exaviate

Pronunciation: /ˈɛks.ə.vi.eɪt/
Definition:
1. To fly out or exit an enclosed space rapidly.
2. To emerge from an interior location by flight (aviation).
3. To ascend or escape from constrained areas aerially.
4. To traverse boundaries or entryways externally by flight (volate).

Significance:
• It defines exiting enclosed spaces by flight (volate).
• It emphasizes rapid aerial egress.
• It identifies boundary-crossing flights (volates).
• It avoids compound and intricate verbs.
• It simplifies descriptions of external flight (volate).
• It improves clarity in aviation contexts.
• It replaces Scandinavian-Germanic, Non-American, foreign, and Anglo-Saxon terms, similar to "fly out".
Past verb: exaviated
Present simple verb: exaviate, exaviates
Present continuous verb: exaviating
Examples:
• "Birds exaviate nests effortlessly."
• "Planes exaviate hangars during takeoffs."
• "Drones exaviate depots for surveillance."
• "Butterflies exaviate greenhouses naturally."
• "Space shuttles (navettes) exaviate launch pads dramatically."
by Dmitrio August 18, 2025
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