Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at repatriating.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Repatriating.
Examples
-
Repatriating to Spain right when his impeccable technique will inexorably begin to diminish, Corella's setting up a smart retirement plan by building Spain's major classical dance company.
Debra Levine: Ballet's Angel Corella Looks Ahead ... and Back Debra Levine 2010
-
Repatriating to Spain right when his impeccable technique will inexorably begin to diminish, Corella's setting up a smart retirement plan by building Spain's major classical dance company.
Debra Levine: Ballet's Angel Corella Looks Ahead ... and Back Debra Levine 2010
-
Repatriating 12-20 Million people is going to be hard.
-
Repatriating 12-20 Million people is going to be hard.
VDARE.com: Blog Articles » Print » CS Monitor On Arizona’s Crackdown on Illegal Employers 2008
-
Repatriating 12-20 Million people is going to be hard.
-
Repatriating our prime-time television dramatic programming may look impossible when you learn that last year nine of the top-10 programs in Canada were American.
-
Repatriating that money will mean buying dollars, and that could boost the currency.
-
"Repatriating refugees to Rwanda prematurely for the sake of political and financial expediency will only cause unnecessary human suffering and set a stage for further unrest," the
-
Repatriating thousands of illegal aliens cost South Africa about R200 million a year, Home Affairs director-general Albert
-
Repatriating our Constitution, creating our own national flag, introducing our own national anthem - creating these national symbols - all of these events should have contributed to nation-building.
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.