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be repatriating
verb
To restore (a person) to his or her own country.
Exact(6)
Sometimes we can be repatriating a person home from abroad and sometimes the repatriation is from the UK.
We were discussing whether they would be repatriating some drug manufacturing — not just research but drug manufacturing — back to the U.K. I'm also minister for space.
The tech giant appears to be repatriating $252 billion, not $350 billion or $230 billion, in offshore profit under a provision of Trump's tax legislation.
With the museum's full consent, the Tseycum tribe will be repatriating the remains of 55 of their ancestors to Canada this week.
I heard recently that the German shipyard that made the Götzen/Liemba may be repatriating it, so if you are going to do this trip yourself, do it soon.
At fringe meetings he dodged big issues such as pension reform, declared that the Tory's cranky immigration policy should stay and pledged that a main aim would be repatriating powers from Brussels, suggesting that he has not overcome his party's obsession with Europe.Tory MPs know how ruthless Labour has proved at exploiting woolly thinking.
Similar(54)
Spent fuel is also to be repatriated.
Exeter's Institute of Cornish Studies will naturally be repatriated.
He added that other divisions will also be repatriated.
He was among the last Germans to be repatriated.
Looted art, proved as stolen, must be repatriated.
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