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the repatriate
verb
To restore (a person) to his or her own country.
Exact(4)
Meanwhile, although more than 155 000 razorback sucker have been repatriated, the repatriate population estimates have remained fairly static between 1000 and 3000 fish.
Repatriates released between the mark and capture years are removed from the estimate calculation for the repatriate population, and the separate estimates for wild and repatriate fish are combined to assess the entire population.
The 'at large' repatriate estimate was generally greater than 75% of the repatriate population, except in 2004 and 2010 when it represented 50% and 21% of the total repatriate population, respectively.
The standard estimate of the repatriate population includes these potentially immature fish as long as they were released prior to March of the marking year, and they can make up a significant portion (up to 50%) of the fish encountered during March surveys.
Similar(54)
Like most of the repatriates, he is now a farmer.
For now, it seems as if the repatriates are in seclusion while intelligence officials question them.
The repatriated money will be taxed at 10 percent, the government said.
Companies spent most of the repatriated $300 billion on dividends and stock buybacks, enriching executives and shareholders.
The repatriated money was to be used only on permissible activities like research and development, capital expenditures and pension funding.
He came through its academy, as did Carles Puyol and Xavi and Andrés Iniesta and the repatriated Gerard Piqué and Fàbregas.
The repatriated money was mostly used for dividend payments, share buybacks (which tend to raise executive pay) and severance pay for employees laid off in corporate restructuring.
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