That is a misuse of the word "expelled". It means to ban a student from a school. In other words, to decide that they will no longer be able to attend it.
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AnonymousHow to say that teacher get out pupil from lesson.Assuming you mean a lesson in a classroom,
CalifJim AnonymousHow to say that teacher get out pupil from lesson.Assuming you mean a lesson in a classroom,The teacher threw the student out of class.CJThat's a bit dramatic. In my part of the world, people would say that a teacher made a student leave their lesson or told a student to leave their lesson.
AnonymousThat's a bit dramatic. In my part of the world, people would say that a teacher made a student leave their lesson or told a student to leave their lesson.Well, when I was a teacher in the South of England, in was not uncommon to say that a teacher threw a student out of a class. The expression merely meant that the teacher told the student to leave.
fivejedjonWell, when I was a teacher in the South of England, in was not uncommon to say that a teacher threw a student out of a class. The expression merely meant that the teacher told the student to leave.There must be regional differences in how to word it. Having attended schools in England, I also heard teachers and children talk about people being se