different between runaway vs expatriate

runaway

English

Alternative forms

  • run-away

Etymology

run +? away

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /???n?we?/

Noun

runaway (plural runaways)

  1. A person or animal that runs away or has run away; a person, animal, or organization that escapes captivity or restrictions.
    Runaway children are vulnerable to criminal exploitation.
  2. A vehicle (especially, a train) that is out of control.
  3. (usually attributive) An object or process that is out of control or out of equilibrium.
  4. The act of running away, especially of a horse or teams.
    • 2012, John H. White, Jr., Wet Britches and Muddy Boots (page 171)
      The drivers were generally boys [] They would stop the team when other boats passed and at locks while waiting for the water to rise or fall. They could also be useful in preventing or stopping runaways. Horses were easily startled and might bolt off the tow path or into the canal itself.
  5. An overwhelming victory.
    The home side won in a runaway.

Translations

Adjective

runaway (comparative more runaway, superlative most runaway)

  1. Having run away; escaped; fugitive
    a runaway thief
    1. (of a horse or other animal) having escaped from the control of the rider or driver
      a runaway donkey
    2. Pertaining to or accomplished by running away or eloping
      a runaway marriage
  2. Easily won, as a contest
    a runaway victory at the polls
  3. unchecked; rampant
    runaway prices
  4. (informal) deserting or revolting against one's group, duties, expected conduct, or the like, especially to establish or join a rival group, change one's life drastically, etc.
    The runaway delegates nominated their own candidate.

Translations

Derived terms

  • run-awayer
  • runaway shop

References

  • Dictionary.com

Related terms

  • run away

runaway From the web:

  • what runaway train about
  • what runaways character are you
  • what's runaway inflation
  • runaway meaning
  • what's runaway in french
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expatriate

English

Etymology

From French expatrier, from ex- (out of) + patrie (native land).

Pronunciation

  • Adjective and noun: IPA(key): /?ks?pæt???t/, /?ks?pe?.t?i.?t/
  • Verb: IPA(key): /?ks?pæt???e?t/, /?ks?pe?.t?i?e?t/
  • Hyphenation: ex?pa?tri?ate

Adjective

expatriate (not comparable)

  1. Living outside of one's own country.

Translations

Noun

expatriate (plural expatriates)

  1. One who lives outside their own country.
    1. One who has been banished from their own country.

Synonyms

  • émigré
  • outland

Derived terms

  • expat
  • rex-pat, rex-patriate

Related terms

  • inpatriate
  • repatriate

Translations

See also

  • emigrant
  • exile
  • immigrant

Verb

expatriate (third-person singular simple present expatriates, present participle expatriating, simple past and past participle expatriated)

  1. (transitive) To banish; to drive or force (a person) from his own country; to make an exile of.
  2. (intransitive) To withdraw from one’s native country.
  3. (intransitive) To renounce the rights and liabilities of citizenship where one is born and become a citizen of another country.

Related terms

  • repatriate
  • patriate

Translations

expatriate From the web:

  • what expatriate means
  • what expatriate means in arabic
  • what expatriate in tagalog
  • expatriate what does that mean
  • expatriate what is the definition
  • urdu meaning of expatriates
  • what is expatriate tax
  • what is expatriate failure
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