evulsion means the action of forcibly pulling something out. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
Why “evulsion” is a great word
EVULSION — [Noun] The action of forcibly pulling or plucking something out. Borrowed from Latin ēvulsiōnem, from ēvellere ("to pluck out"), from ē- ("out") + vellere ("to pluck, pull"). First attested in English circa 1611. Unlike "avulsion," which implies a tearing away, often of land or flesh, or "extraction," which suggests a clinical or mechanical removal, evulsion emphasizes the raw, muscular act of drawing forth against resistance. It is the dentist's grim wrench on a stubborn molar, the gardener’s two-handed heave to dislodge a deep-rooted weed, and the anguished withdrawal of a splinter from tender flesh. The word itself is the sound of something giving way.
noun
- The action of forcibly pulling something out.“Herein, therefore, to speak compendiously, we first presume to affirm that, from a strict enquiry, we cannot maintain the evulsion or biting off any parts [...].”