English
Etymology
From deport + -ee.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /dɪˌpɔːˈti/
Noun
deportee (plural deportees)
- A deported person.
2024 October 19, Catherine E. Shoichet, “Trump’s mass deportation plans would be costly. Here’s why”, in CNN[1]:That year ICE also said the average cost of transporting one deportee to their home country was $1,978.
2025 February 1, Annie Correal, “U.S. Military Planes Deliver Deportees to Honduras”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN:But on Friday, a U.S. Air Force plane carrying more than 70 deportees arrived around midday in the city of San Pedro Sula, about 100 miles northwest of Tegucigalpa, the capital.
Translations
deported person
- Catalan: deportat (ca) m, deportada (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 被驅逐出境者 / 被驱逐出境者, 被驱逐出境者 (zh) (bèiqūzhúchūjìngzhě)
- French: déporté (fr) m, déportée (fr) f
- German: Deportierter m, Deportierte f
- Irish: ionnarbthach m
- Italian: deportato (it) m, deportata (it) f
- Japanese: 被追放者 (ひついほうしゃ、hitsuihōsha)
- Korean: please add this translation if you can
- Russian: со́сланный (ru) (sóslannyj), со́сланная (ru) f (sóslannaja), депорти́рованный (ru) m (deportírovannyj), депорти́рованная (ru) f (deportírovannaja), депортированное лицо n (deportirovannoje lico)
- Spanish: deportado (es) m, deportada (es) f
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