What is the difference between banishment and exile




















To be sent away from your place of origin. Exile is to exclude from. To be excluded from your own place of origin. Deport is to remove. To be sent away from a place, not of your origin. All have generally the same meaning. See a translation. Highly-rated answerer. The one learning a language! Learn about premium features. Tired of searching? HiNative can help you find that answer you're looking for. Register for free. Solve your problems more easily with the app! You should upgrade or use an alternative browser.

Exile vs banish. Thread starter Dunno Start date May 15, Dunno Senior Member Slovak. The words are exile and banish. But both could apply to both words, so I am not sure. I will be happy to hear your opinions.

Thank you in advance for your help. Romeo was "banished" as a punishment Romeo and Juliet, act 3; scene 3 : Ha, banishment! Banished is always a result of somebody making a decree that the person has to leave or is no longer welcome in that place. You can be banished from a country or even a club, for instance. Exiled is sometimes used in a looser sense. He doesn't feel safe there. He could go back he's not banished but chooses not to because he's afraid of what might happen if he does.

In the U. Were Adam and Eve banished or exiled from the Paradise? Click to expand Incommunicado Senior Member Spoleto, Italia. If I were to talk about exile in this case I'd say it was self-imposed exile.

I wouldn't call them ex pats, though. I'm an ex pat. I've lived here for nearly forty years but it was my choice: I wasn't banished or exiled and I certainly didn't flee the UK.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000