deport
英 [dɪˈpɔːt]
美 [dɪˈpɔːrt]
- vt. 驱逐出境;举止;放逐
- n. (Deport)人名;(捷)德波特;(法)德波尔
deport 驱逐出境de-, 向下,离开。port, 港口。即使离港。
- deport
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deport: see port
- deport (v.1)
- late 15c., "to behave," from Old French deporter "behave, deport (oneself)" (12c.), also with a wide range of meanings in Old French, such as "be patient; take one's (sexual) pleasure with; amuse, entertain; remain, delay, tarry; cheer, console, treat kindly; put aside, cast off, send away," from de- "from, off" (see de-) + porter "to carry," from Latin portare "to carry" (see port (n.1)). Related: Deported; deporting.
- deport (v.2)
- "banish," 1640s, from French déporter, from Latin deportare "carry off, transport, banish, exile," from de- in its sense of "off, away" (see de-) + portare "to carry" (but associated by folk etymology with portus "harbor"); see port (n.1). Related: Deported; deporting.
- 1. The Home Office is usually quick to deport undesirables.
- 内政部通常会迅速地将不受欢迎人士驱逐出境。
- 2. We deport aliens who slip across our borders.
- 我们把偷渡入境的外国人驱逐出境.
- 3. That is the way in which we should deport ourselves.
- 这才是我们的行为方式.
- 4. We should deport the criminal who has entered the country illegally.
- 我们应该驱逐非法入境的罪犯.
- 5. It's important to teach a child how to deport himself in public.
- 教会小孩在公众场合如何举止得体十分重要.