- Keep out - ostracise - Prevent from entering - Shut out - To shut out; to hinder from entrance or admission; to
debar from participation or enjoyment; to deprive of; to except; -- the
opposite to admit; as, to exclude a crowd from a room or house; to
exclude the light; to exclude one nation from the ports of another; to
exclude a taxpayer from the privilege of voting. - To thrust out or eject; to expel; as, to exclude young
animals from the womb or from eggs.
- Parry, ... off - A fiend. - To keep off; to prevent from entering or hitting; to ward
off; to shut out; -- often with off; as, to fend off blows. - To act on the defensive, or in opposition; to resist; to
parry; to shift off.
- A kind of shield, of various shapes and sizes, worn on one
of the arms (usually the left) for protecting the front of the body. - One of the large, bony, external plates found on many
ganoid fishes. - The anterior segment of the shell of trilobites. - A block of wood or plate of iron made to fit a hawse hole,
or the circular opening in a half-port, to prevent water from entering
when the vessel pitches. - To shield; to defend.
- Colander - It tries very hard to act as a filter? - Kitchen gadget - Sieve - One who strains. - That through which any liquid is passed for purification
or to separate it from solid matter; anything, as a screen or a cloth,
used to strain a liquid; a device of the character of a sieve or of a
filter; specifically, an openwork or perforated screen, as for the end
of the suction pipe of a pump, to prevent large solid bodies from
entering with a liquid.
- Forbid - Prevent something from happening - To put a barrier before; hence, to shut out; to hinder;
to stop; to impede. - To shut out by anticipative action; to prevent or hinder
by necessary consequence or implication; to deter action of, access to,
employment of, etc.; to render ineffectual; to obviate by anticipation.
- deliberately prevent child from succeeding - Disown - To cut off from an inheritance or from hereditary
succession; to prevent, as an heir, from coming into possession of any
property or right, which, by law or custom, would devolve on him in the
course of descent. - To deprive of heritage; to dispossess.