| ex·ile   (ĕ g zī l′ , ĕ k sī l′ ) 
       Share: 
            
 
               n.1. a.  The condition or period of being forced to live away from one's native country or home, especially as a punishment. b.  The condition or period of self-imposed absence from one's country or home: a writer living in exile in protest. 2.  One who lives away from one's native country, whether because of expulsion or voluntary absence. tr.v.  ex·iled, ex·il·ing , ex·iles  To send into exile; banish: The royal family was exiled after the uprising. 
 [Middle English exil, from Old French, from Latin exilium, from exul, exsul, exiled person, wanderer.] 
 ex·ilic (ĭg-zĭlĭk, ĭk-sĭl-),  ex·ilian (ĭg-zĭlyən, -zĭlē-ən, ĭk-sĭlyən, -sĭlē-ən) adj. |