Ejection in a sentence as a noun

Yes, when you threaten people with ejection sometimes they threaten you right back.

I'd guess by the size of this mass ejection, a geomagnetic storm will be created.

OK, fess up, who else thought that the Tigre had an ejection seat because they saw it in a James Bond movie?

There's a decent chance of significant injury and even death in an ejection.

The comet only appears to explode because of a coronal mass ejection.

Fun fact: The Russian Kamov KA-50 [1] is one of the very few helicopters equipped with ejection seats.

Go and tell that to OP's neighbors, who were not expecting an XXX **** fest in their building, complete with random ejection of furniture into the street.

Plus, actual ejection mechanisms are kinda a necessity in this imperfect world.

A coronal mass ejection, or a massive burst of solar wind and magnetic fields, that erupted from the sun in March 2012 provided scientists the data they needed.

The article attributes the coronal mass ejection to "an explosion on the other side of the star" and suggests that the timing was coincidental.

According to Wikipedia, the rotor blades and canopy are blown away by explosive charges before the ejection seat is triggered.

Also the same went for the fighter jet safety systems and a common story goes that for a long time only Soviet jets had ejection seats capable of safely rescuing pilots if activated on the ground.

Soups were discoverable databases that intelligently handled Flash cards insertion/ejection.

Personally I think the only way to maintain a very high standard of quality in a community is strict hands-on moderation and swift ejection of members who don't match the community's goals and vibe.

"As an outgrowth of Bill Weaver's inability to see out of his faceplate from the ice buildup, futre SR-71 ejection seats incorporated a battery pack that continued to keep the glass faceplate heated during the frigid descent.

I believe that it's not uncommon for the ejection seats in private L-39's to be inop, my guess would be due to the cost to keep them maintained and/or that the consequences of a poorly maintained system ejecting spontaneously or accidentally is worse than just having them disabled.

Ejection definitions

noun

the act of expelling or projecting or ejecting

See also: expulsion projection

noun

the act of forcing out someone or something; "the ejection of troublemakers by the police"; "the child's expulsion from school"

See also: exclusion expulsion riddance