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- Exile (American band) - Wikipedia
Exile, formerly the Exiles, is an American band founded in Richmond, Kentucky, in 1963 The band consists of J P Pennington and Les Taylor, both of whom are guitarists and vocalists, along with Sonny LeMaire (bass guitar, vocals), Marlon Hargis (keyboards), and Steve Goetzman (drums)
- EXILE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of EXILE is the state or a period of forced absence from one's country or home How to use exile in a sentence Synonym Discussion of Exile
- EXILE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
EXILE definition: 1 the condition of someone being sent or kept away from their own country, village, etc… Learn more
- Exile Definition Meaning | Britannica Dictionary
EXILE meaning: 1 : a situation in which you are forced to leave your country or home and go to live in a foreign country often used after in or into sometimes used figuratively; 2 : a period of time during which someone has lived in exile
- EXILE definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
If someone is living in exile, they are living in a foreign country because they cannot live in their own country, usually for political reasons He is now living in exile in Egypt He returned from exile earlier this year
- Exile - definition of exile by The Free Dictionary
1 expulsion from one's native land or home by authoritative decree 2 the fact or state of such expulsion: to live in exile 3 prolonged separation from one's country or home, as by force of circumstances: wartime exile 4 a person banished or separated from his or her native land
- exile - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
exile (countable and uncountable, plural exiles) (uncountable) The state of being banished from one's home or country He lived in exile They chose exile rather than assimilation
- What does exile mean? - Definitions. net
Someone who is banished from one's home or country To send into exile Etymology: exil, from essil exil, from exsilium, exilium, derived from exsul, exul Small; slender; not full; not powerful Not in use, except in philosophical writings Etymology: exilis, Latin
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