| evacuate | | |
| v. (motion) | 1. evacuate | move out of an unsafe location into safety.; "After the earthquake, residents were evacuated" |
| ~ move | change residence, affiliation, or place of employment.; "We moved from Idaho to Nebraska"; "The basketball player moved from one team to another" |
| v. (change) | 2. evacuate | empty completely.; "evacuate the bottle" |
| ~ empty | make void or empty of contents.; "Empty the box"; "The alarm emptied the building" |
| v. (motion) | 3. evacuate | move people from their homes or country. |
| ~ move | change residence, affiliation, or place of employment.; "We moved from Idaho to Nebraska"; "The basketball player moved from one team to another" |
| ~ displace | cause to move, usually with force or pressure.; "the refugees were displaced by the war" |
| v. (change) | 4. evacuate | create a vacuum in (a bulb, flask, reaction vessel). |
| ~ empty | make void or empty of contents.; "Empty the box"; "The alarm emptied the building" |
| v. (body) | 5. empty, evacuate, void | excrete or discharge from the body. |
| ~ egest, excrete, eliminate, pass | eliminate from the body.; "Pass a kidney stone" |
| ~ suction | empty or clean (a body cavity) by the force of suction.; "suction the uterus in an abortion" |
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