evacuation

evacuation
1. The process of moving any person who is wounded, injured, or ill to and/or between medical treatment facilities. 2. The clearance of personnel, animals, or materiel from a given locality. 3. The controlled process of collecting, classifying, and shipping unserviceable or abandoned materiel, US or foreign, to appropriate reclamation, maintenance, technical intelligence, or disposal facilities. 4. The ordered or authorized departure of noncombatants from a specific area by Department of State, Department of Defense, or appropriate military commander. This refers to the movement from one area to another in the same or different countries. The evacuation is caused by unusual or emergency circumstances and applies equally to command or non-command sponsored family members. See also evacuee; noncombatant evacuation operations.

Military dictionary. 2000.

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  • évacuation — [ evakɥasjɔ̃ ] n. f. • 1314; bas lat. evacuatio 1 ♦ Rejet, expulsion de matière hors de l organisme. ⇒ élimination, excrétion, expulsion. Évacuation par la bouche. ⇒ crachement, vomissement. Évacuation des excréments. ⇒ défécation, déjection. «… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Evacuation — may refer to: * Emergency evacuation, the mass movement of persons from a dangerous place due to a disaster * Patient evacuation, the procedure for moving a casualty from its initial location to an ambulance * Casualty evacuation (CASEVAC),… …   Wikipedia

  • evacuation — UK US /ɪˌvækjuˈeɪʃən/ noun [C or U] WORKPLACE ► the process of moving people from a dangerous place to somewhere safe: »an evacuation plan/map/procedure »building/office/emergency evacuation …   Financial and business terms

  • Evacuation — E*vac u*a tion, n. [L. evacuatio: cf. F. [ e]vacuation.] 1. The act of emptying, clearing of the contents, or discharging. Specifically: (a) (Mil.) Withdrawal of troops from a town, fortress, etc. (b) (Med.) Voidance of any matter by the natural… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • evacuation — c.1400, discharge from the body (originally mostly of blood), from O.Fr. évacuation and directly from L.L. evacuationem (nom. EVACUATIO (Cf. evacuatio)), noun of action from pp. stem of evacuare (see EVACUATE (Cf. evacuate)) …   Etymology dictionary

  • evacuation — Evacuation, Exinanitio. Evacuation de mauvaises humeurs, Detractiones …   Thresor de la langue françoyse

  • Evacuation — Evacuation, lat. deutsch, Ausleerung; evacuiren, ausleeren, räumen …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • evacuation — index abandonment (desertion), egress, flight, outflow, removal, resignation (relinquishment) …   Law dictionary

  • evacuation — [ē vak΄yo͞o ā′shən, ivak΄yo͞o ā′shən] n. [ME evacuacioun < L evacuatio] 1. an evacuating or being evacuated 2. something evacuated; specif., feces …   English World dictionary

  • évacuation — (é va ku a sion ; en vers, de six syllabes) s. f. 1°   Action de vider. L évacuation d un hôpital. •   Bagration et Barclay revenaient vers Smolensk à grands pas, l un pour la sauver par une bataille, l autre pour protéger la fuite de ses… …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • evacuation — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ large scale, mass, massive ▪ emergency, immediate ▪ forced, mandatory (AmE) ▪ …   Collocations dictionary

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