0 past simple and past participle of unseat --
1 to remove someone from power, especially as a result of an election: --
2 If a horse unseats its rider, it throws them from its back. --
What happens to a mounted officer who is unseated involuntarily from his horse?
He cannot be unseated; he has not to fight elections.
The most effective way to ensure that elections are not corruptly conducted seems to be that people who try to corrupt shall be unseated.
It would not disturb me too much if public opinion unseated them.
He got him unseated, but not because there was any spiritual disability.
If the petition were to be upheld, the member would be unseated and there would have to be a by-election.
A third dog was seized after it attacked horses and unseated a rider.
It would be absurd to suppose that old beliefs can be unseated and old usages altered without some element of danger.