exeunt
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin exeunt (“they leave”), the third-person plural present active indicative of exeō (“leave”).
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈɛksi.ənt/
Noun
exeunt (plural exeunts)
- A stage direction for more than one actor to leave the stage.
- 1909, Victor Emanuel Albright, The Shakesperian stage, page 124:
- undoubtedly the curtains closed at the exeunt of all the characters but one.
- 2002, Alan C. Dessen, Rescripting Shakespeare: the text, the director, and modern productions, page 223:
- In addition, several exits that have interpretative significance are changed by editors to exeunts and vice-versa.
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- An act of one or more actors leaving the stage.
- 1854, Anna Cora Ogden Mowatt Ritchie, Autobiography of an Actress; Or, Eight Years on the Stage, page 35:
- To supply the place of scenery, it was hung round with crimson curtains, through which we were to make our entrances and exeunts.
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Verb
exeunt (third-person singular simple present exeunts, present participle exeunting, simple past and past participle exeunted)
- (archaic) They leave the stage (a stage direction to two or more actors, the plural counterpart of exit).
- William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet
- Get thee to bed, and rest; for thou hast need. (Exeunt Lady Capulet and Nurse.)
- Christopher Marlow, Doctor Faustus
- Enter two Devils.
- Wagner. How now sir, will you serve me now?
- Robin. Ay, good Wagner, take away the devils then.
- Wagner. Spirits, away! [Exeunt Devils.] Now, sirrah, follow me.
- 1921, Montrose Jonas Moses, A Treasury of Plays for Children, page 504:
- Jane, Ursa, carrying Thomas, and Moss Bud start to exeunt.
- 1957, Henry Miller, Big Sur and the oranges of Hieronymus Bosch, page 249:
- On that dixit we exeunted.
- 1997, Richard Marcinko; John Weisman, Task Force Blue, page 311:
- That let the small problem of getting the van within proximity, running a few yards of cable, spiking the phone line, revving the engine and frying the phones, removing the cable, and exeunting, south
- 2003, Neal Stephenson, Quicksilver, page 142:
- The lasses picked up their skirts and exeunted.
- William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet
Latin
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