| 释义 | 
		egresse‧gress /ˈiːɡres/ noun [uncountable] formal or law    egressOrigin: 1500-1600 Latin egressus, from egredi  ‘to go out’  - Another is that a store is useless without means of access and egress.
 - Denied its usual egress, the river had burst its banks and was pouring down the fire-ravaged streets.
 - Despite the egress of isolated specimens, museum collections grow in proportion to the director's burden of deciding what to accept.
 - We've moved in through the looking-glass and now we're too big, too enormous for egress.
 - With affordable internal access and egress, basements provide options for dwellings short of space.
 
    the act of leaving a building or place, or the right to do this  |