The word "eject" is correct and can be used in written English. You can use it when you want to describe the action of expelling or forcing someone or something out from a place or thing. For example, "The bouncer ejected the unruly partygoer from the club.".
It is probably unlikely this side of the next assembly elections – due in 2011 – that the SDLP leadership will take a risk and eject themselves from the executive.
Standing order 94a gives speakers the power to eject disorderly members from the chamber of the House of Representatives for one hour.
The Scottish Nationalists are pledged to do all in their power to eject David Cameron.
Of course, that would require a supply of hydrogen, and producing hydrogen takes energy which would have to be generated in a way that produces no carbon dioxide.Perhaps the most intriguing idea which was published last year, though not discussed by the Royal Society is to eject carbon dioxide from the atmosphere at the Earth's poles, using the planet's magnetic field.
An RPG warhead may eject a copper spike weighing several hundred grams.
He may also be sweating it out, hoping that success in the upper-house elections will enable him to eject his awkward bedfellows.
He made a deal with the devil last year when he recruited the rebels of the Forces Nouvelles, who were allied to other shady armed groups, to eject his predecessor.
Ludwig does not simply clarify my doubts with English writing, it enlightens my writing with new possibilities
Simone Ivan Conte
Software Engineer at Adobe, UK