ex
ex L. ex out of, prep. and prefix (see EX-1, E-) = Gr. ex (see EX-2), OIr. ess-. In Eng. in certain L. phrs., as ex cathedra from the CHAIR (i.e. of authority) XIX; ex libris ‘out of the books’ (of somebody), from the LIBRARY (of) XIX; ex officio by virtue of one's OFFICE XVI; ex(-)parte with respect to a PART, (leg.) on one side only XVII; ex voto (short for ex voto suscepto from a vow undertaken) offering made in pursuance of a vow XVIII.
b. Prefixed to titles of rank after late L. usage in excōnsul, nom. evolved from ex cōnsule ‘from (being) consul’, (hence) lately consul; whence gen. with the sense ‘former’, as in ex-professor, and by further extension prefixed to adjs. (after ex-consular XVII) or to sbs. used attrib., as ex-service.
c. In commercial use, with ref. to goods, ‘out of’, ‘landed from’ (a ship); similarly ex-warehouse; ‘without’, ‘exclusive of’, as in ex-dividend.
b. Prefixed to titles of rank after late L. usage in excōnsul, nom. evolved from ex cōnsule ‘from (being) consul’, (hence) lately consul; whence gen. with the sense ‘former’, as in ex-professor, and by further extension prefixed to adjs. (after ex-consular XVII) or to sbs. used attrib., as ex-service.
c. In commercial use, with ref. to goods, ‘out of’, ‘landed from’ (a ship); similarly ex-warehouse; ‘without’, ‘exclusive of’, as in ex-dividend.
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