Expel vs Expatriate - What's the difference?
expel | expatriate | Related terms |
To eject or erupt.
(obsolete) To fire (a bullet, arrow etc.).
* , II.xi:
To remove from membership.
* {{quote-news, year=2011, date=December 14, author=Angelique Chrisafis
, title=Rachida Dati accuses French PM of sexism and elitism, work=Guardian
To deport.
Of, or relating to, people who are expatriates.
* an expatriate mailing list
One who lives outside one’s own country.
One who has been banished from one’s own country.
To banish; to drive or force (a person) from his own country; to make an exile of.
To withdraw from one’s native country.
To renounce the rights and liabilities of citizenship where one is born and become a citizen of another country.
Expel is a related term of expatriate.
As verbs the difference between expel and expatriate
is that expel is to eject or erupt while expatriate is to banish; to drive or force (a person) from his own country; to make an exile of.As an adjective expatriate is
of, or relating to, people who are expatriates.As a noun expatriate is
one who lives outside one’s own country.expel
English
Verb
- But to the ground the idle quarrell fell: / Then he another and another did expell .
citation, page=, passage=She was Nicolas Sarkozy's pin-up for diversity, the first Muslim woman with north African parents to hold a major French government post. But Rachida Dati has now turned on her own party elite with such ferocity that some have suggested she should be expelled from the president's ruling party.}}