verb, -at⋅ed, -at⋅ing, adjective, noun | 1. | to banish (a person) from his or her native country. |
| 2. | to withdraw (oneself) from residence in one's native country. |
| 3. | to withdraw (oneself) from allegiance to one's country. |
| 4. | to become an expatriate: He expatriated from his homeland. |
| 5. | expatriated; exiled. |
| 6. | an expatriated person: Many American writers were living as expatriates in Paris. |
ex·pa·tri·ate (ěk-spā'trē-āt') v. ex·pa·tri·at·ed, ex·pa·tri·at·ing, ex·pa·tri·ates v. tr.
Residing in a foreign country; expatriated: "She delighted in the bohemian freedom enjoyed by the expatriate artists, writers, and performers living in Rome" (Janet H. Murray). [Medieval Latin expatriāre, expatriāt- : Latin ex-, ex- + Latin patria, native land (from patrius, paternal, from pater, father; see pəter- in Indo-European roots).] ex·pa'tri·a'tion n. |