? Obs. [ad. L. exitiōn-em, n. of action f. exīre: see EXIT sb.] The action of going out or forth; departure, exit; also, place or point of exit.
1670. Conclave wherein Clement VIII. was elected Pope, 17. That his exition might not be prevalent with any other, the door was presently shut.
1676. Worlidge, Cider (1691), 143. Which so condenseth its Spirits, that they seek not any exition or expansion.
1816. Keatinge, Trav. (1817), II. 65. The building has but one gate or outlet, where the search upon exition is as close as in the diamond-mines of India.