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  1. Dictionary
    oust·er
    /ˈoustər/

    noun

    • 1. dismissal or expulsion from a position: North American "a showdown that may lead to his ouster as leader of the party"
    • 2. ejection from a freehold or other possession; deprivation of an inheritance.

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Ouster is a noun that means a wrongful dispossession, a judgment removing an officer or depriving a corporation of a franchise, or expulsion. Learn more about its synonyms, examples, etymology, and related words.

  3. Ouster is a noun that means the process of removing someone from an important position or job. Learn how to use it in sentences, see related words and phrases, and find translations in different languages.

  4. Ouster is a noun that means expulsion or removal from a place or position occupied. It can also mean an ejection or eviction, or a wrongful exclusion from real property. Learn more about its origin, usage and synonyms.

  5. Use the noun ouster to talk about the process of forcing someone out of a position. If your city's mayor is pressured to leave office, you can describe it as her ouster. When someone is dismissed or strongly influenced to abandon a position or quit a job, it's an ouster.

  6. Ouster is a noun that means the act or state of ejecting, forcing out, or supplanting someone or something. It can also refer to the wrongful exclusion or dispossession of someone from property. See different sources and translations of ouster.

  7. Ouster is a noun that means the act of forcing someone to leave a position of power, job, or place, or the act of dispossessing of freehold property. Learn more about its usage, synonyms, pronunciation, and examples from Collins English Dictionary.

  8. Ouster is a noun that means the act of ejecting, forcing out, or supplanting someone or something. It can also refer to the state of being ejected, expelled, or dismissed. See synonyms, sentences, and origin of ouster.