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exit visa


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Also see: visa

WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026
ex•it1 /ˈɛgzɪt, ˈɛksɪt/USA pronunciation  n. [countable]
  1. a way or passage out, as a door, stairs, etc.:There is only one exit in this building.
  2. a going out or away;
    departure:He made a graceful exit.

v. 
  1. to go out (of);
    leave (from);
    depart (from): [no object;
    (~ + from + object)]
    They exited from the room.[+ object]To exit the building, follow these directions.

WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026
ex•it1  (egzit, eksit),USA pronunciation n. 
  1. a way or passage out:Please leave the theater by the nearest exit.
  2. any of the marked ramps or spurs providing egress from a highway:Take the second exit after the bridge for the downtown shopping district.
  3. a going out or away;
    departure:to make one's exit.
  4. Show Businessa departure of an actor from the stage as part of the action of a play.
  5. GamesAlso called exit card′. [Bridge.]a card that enables a player to relinquish the lead when having it is a disadvantage.

v.i. 
  1. to go out;
    leave.
  2. Games[Bridge.]to play an exit card.

v.t. 
  1. to leave;
    depart from:Sign out before you exit the building.
  • Latin exitus act or means of going out, equivalent. to exi-, variant stem of exīre to go out (ex- ex-1 + īre to go) + -tus suffix of verb, verbal action; partly noun, nominal, verb, verbal use of exit2
  • partly 1580–90

ex•it2  (egzit, eksit),USA pronunciation v.i. 
  1. Show Business(he or she) goes offstage (used as a stage direction, often preceding the name of the character):Exit Falstaff.
  • Latin ex(i)it literally, (he) goes out, 3rd singular present of exīre; see exit1
  • 1530–40

Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
exit /ˈɛɡzɪt; ˈɛksɪt/ n
  1. a way out; door or gate by which people may leave
  2. the act or an instance of going out; departure
    • the act of leaving or right to leave a particular place
    • (as modifier): an exit visa
  3. departure from life; death
  4. the act of going offstage
  5. (in Britain) a point at which vehicles may leave or join a motorway
vb (intransitive)
  1. to go away or out; depart; leave
  2. to go offstage: used as a stage direction: exit Hamlet
  3. (sometimes tr) to leave (a computer program or system)
Etymology: 17th Century: from Latin exitus a departure, from exīre to go out, from ex-1 + īre to go
'exit visa' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):

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