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  1. JETTISON definition: 1. to get rid of something or someone that is not wanted or needed: 2. to decide not to use an…. Learn more.

  2. jettison: [verb] to get rid of as superfluous or encumbering : omit or forgo as part of a plan or as the result of some other decision.

  3. JETTISON meaning: 1. to get rid of something or someone that is not wanted or needed: 2. to decide not to use an…. Learn more.

  4. Jettison definition: to cast (goods) overboard in order to lighten a vessel or aircraft or to improve its stability in an emergency.. See examples of JETTISON used in a sentence.

  5. 3 meanings: 1. to throw away; abandon 2. to throw overboard 3. → another word for jetsam (sense 1).... Click for more definitions.

  6. JETTISON definition: 1. to get rid of something you do not want or need: 2. If an aircraft or a ship jettisons…. Learn more.

  7. 1. to cast (cargo, supplies, etc.) overboard or out so as to lighten or stabilize a vessel or aircraft in an emergency.

  8. jettison: 1 v throw away, of something encumbering Type of: cast aside , cast away , cast out , chuck out , discard , dispose , fling , put away , throw away , throw out , toss , toss away , toss out throw or cast away v throw as from an airplane Type of: throw propel through the air

  9. 1. When the ship started sinking, the crew had to jettison the cargo to stay afloat. 2. To make the hot air balloon rise, we had to jettison some ballast. 3. In a crisis, it's important to jettison any non-essential activities to focus on the most important tasks. 4. To achieve your goals, you may need to jettison old habits that are holding you back. 5.

  10. The earliest known use of the verb jettison is in the 1840s.. OED's earliest evidence for jettison is from 1848, in the writing of Joseph Arnould, judge in India and writer.. It is also recorded as a noun from the Middle English period (1150—1500).

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