Outlaw vs Expatriate - What's the difference?
outlaw | expatriate | Related terms |
A fugitive from the law.
A person who is excluded from normal legal rights.
A person who operates outside established norms.
A wild horse.
(humorous) An in-law: a relative by marriage.
To declare illegal
To place a ban upon
To remove from legal jurisdiction or enforcement.
To deprive of legal force.
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.
Outlaw is a related term of expatriate.
As nouns the difference between outlaw and expatriate
is that outlaw is a fugitive from the law while expatriate is one who lives outside one’s own country.As verbs the difference between outlaw and expatriate
is that outlaw is to declare illegal 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.outlaw
English
Noun
(en noun)- The main character of the play was a bit of an outlaw who refused to shake hands or say thank you.
Synonyms
* (person that operates outside established norms) anti-heroVerb
(outlaw)- to outlaw a debt or claim
- Laws outlawed by necessity. — Fuller.