ousterous‧ter /ˈaʊstə $ -ər/ noun [uncountable] American EnglishWord Origin
WORD ORIGINouster
Origin:
1500-1600Anglo-French ➔ OUST
Examples
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES
Havel's ouster came as a shock to everybody.
EXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS
Another important type of statutory ouster clause are clauses which set a time-limit on judicial review.
Did she manipulate the ouster of White House travel office personnel so her pals could get the job?
In fact Jeffries' ouster provoked not a ripple in Harlem, and nothing more dangerous than a rally on campus.
Nor would he send them letters announcing their ouster.
The cases on ouster clauses and tribunals were irrelevant to clauses excluding appeal from the High Court.
when someone is removed from a position of power or from a competition – used in news reportssomebody’s ouster/the ouster of somebody the ouster of the brutal dictatorship