| 1. | Finance. without, not including, or without the right to have: ex interest; ex rights. |
| 2. | Commerce. free of charges to the purchaser until the time of removal from a specified place or thing: ex ship; ex warehouse; ex elevator. |
| 3. | (in U.S. colleges and universities) from, but not graduated with, the class of: ex '47. |
| a prefix meaning “out of,” “from,” and hence “utterly,” “thoroughly,” and sometimes imparting a privative or negative force or indicating a former title, status, etc.; freely used as an English formative: exstipulate; exterritorial; ex-president (former president); ex-member; ex-wife. |
| Exodus. |
| 1. | examination. |
| 2. | examined. |
| 3. | example. |
| 4. | except. |
| 5. | exception. |
| 6. | exchange. |
| 7. | excursion. |
| 8. | executed. |
| 9. | executive. |
| 10. | express. |
| 11. | extra. |
| a combining form meaning “outside,” “outer,” “external,” used in the formation of compound words: exocentric. |
| Ex abbr. Bible Exodus |
ex·o·dus (ěk'sə-dəs) n.
[Late Latin, from Greek exodos : ex-, out; see exo- + hodos, way, journey.] |
ex
[ɛks]
|
ex
ex- pref.
Outside; out of; away from: excementosis.
exo- pref.
Outside; external: exoskeleton.
| Ex Exodus |