(1) The act of removing or getting rid of something
(2) The act of forcing out someone or something
(1) This connection was expressed in their religious behaviour, in the pattern of closely related families fighting over territory, and in their disease riddance customs.
(2) Moksha in the theory of reincarnation means the riddance from repeated births in this world and living in a state of Bliss with God.
(3) There is also a myth about the riddance of tapeworms concerning the other end of the body.
(4) In this respect she differs from Portia of The Merchant of Venice, who says of the black Prince of Morocco, after he has failed to guess the correct casket, u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510A gentle riddance .u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb
(5) The new movement emphasized discipline, not riddance or punishment as a method of solving the criminal problem
(6) In his 1926 book, Crooke included Hutton's tale as an example of disease riddance by passing a sealed container of contagion; he omitted the Naga storyteller's passing reference to the gift of clothing.
(7) When riddance by bullet emerges as the most expeditious way to dispose of her husband's victims, she is eventually even prodded into becoming Clint's executioner.
(8) As far as environmentalists are concerned, Suarez's departure is a welcome riddance .
(9) Now a time has come when the country, in order to seek the final riddance from terrorism, will have to throw aside its mutual differences and hostilities and rise as a single united force.
ejection
expulsion
exclusion