deport
deport 英 [dɪˈpɔ:t] 美 [dɪˈpɔrt]
vt. 驱逐出境;递解出境
进行时:deporting 过去式:deported 过去分词:deported 第三人称单数:deports
- To deport is to kick someone out of a country. Deporting is also to deliver a person to the authorities of another country. Although you might like to deport your little brother from your room, it’s something governments do.
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- vt. 驱逐出境;递解出境
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1. Several of them now face deportation.
他们中几个正面临递解出境。
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2. a deportation order
驱逐出境令
- deport (v.1) late 15c., "to behave," from Old French deporter "behave, deport (oneself)" (12c.), also with a wide range of meanings in Old French, such as "be patient; take one's (sexual) pleasure with; amuse, entertain; remain, delay, tarry; cheer, console, treat kindly; put aside, cast off, send away," from de- "from, off" (see de-) + porter "to carry," from Latin portare "to carry," from PIE root *per-(2) "to lead, pass over." Related: Deported; deporting.
- deport (v.2) "banish," 1640s, from French déporter, from Latin deportare "carry off, transport, banish, exile," from de- in its sense of "off, away" (see de-) + portare "to carry," from PIE *prto-, suffixed form of PIE root *per-(2) "to lead, pass over." Associated by folk etymology with portus "harbor." Related: Deported; deporting.
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