exeat
English
editEtymology
editBorrowed from Latin exeat, third-person singular subjunctive of exeō (“depart”) used as an impersonal imperative, literally “let him go forth”.
Noun
editexeat (plural exeats)
- A license or permit for absence from a university or a religious house (such as a monastery).
- Coordinate term: absit
- A permission which a bishop grants to a priest to go out of his diocese.
- (dated, UK) Leave of absence from a public school or college.
- 1984, Anita Brookner, Hotel du Lac, Penguin, published 2016, page 66:
- [I]t was impossible to imagine her doing anything except eating ice-cream and smoking, like a child on an exeat from school.
- (obsolete, theater) A stage direction to leave the stage.
- Coordinate term: (plural form) exeunt
Related terms
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editLatin
editVerb
editexeat