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the repatriated
verb
To restore (a person) to his or her own country.
Exact(28)
The costing categories prone to sensitivity analysis were the cost of transportation, (helicopter or fuel consumption in case of ship deviations) compensation costs to the repatriated seafarer, the cost of managing the repatriation case, insurance premium increase and the cost of recruiting a new seafarer.
The repatriated money will be taxed at 10 percent, the government said.
The repatriated money was to be used only on permissible activities like research and development, capital expenditures and pension funding.
Companies spent most of the repatriated $300 billion on dividends and stock buybacks, enriching executives and shareholders.
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.
He came through its academy, as did Carles Puyol and Xavi and Andrés Iniesta and the repatriated Gerard Piqué and Fàbregas.
Similar(30)
In late 2011, the U.S. repatriated the eggs.
The lawsuit said the bank then repatriated the laundered money to Lebanon, where Hezbollah received a portion.
Between the armistice in July and the end of August 1953, the squadron repatriated over 900 Commonwealth prisoners of war.
The moment we repatriated the money, we'd be taxed at the higher American corporate tax rate.
For example, Pfizer, the corporation that repatriated the most foreign earnings -- $35.5 billion -- cut 11,748 jobs in the United States from 2004 through 2007.
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