Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Eject

Eject , transitive verb

[Latin ejectus, past participle of ejicere; e out + jacere to throw. See Jet a shooting forth.]

1.
To expel; to dismiss; to cast forth; to thrust or drive out; to discharge; as, to eject a person from a room; to eject a traitor from the country; to eject words from the language.
Eyes ejecting flame. — H. Brooke
2.
(Law) To cast out; to evict; to dispossess; as, to eject tenants from an estate.

Eject , noun

[See Eject, transitive verb]

(Philosophy) An object that is a conscious or living object, and hence not a direct object, but an inferred object or act of a subject, not myself; -- a term invented by W. K. Clifford.