1. repatriate - Noun
2. repatriate - Verb
To restore to one's own country.
Source: Webster's dictionaryAfter a protracted lawsuit, the Met conceded that it was looted, and agreed in 2006 to repatriate it to Sicily, with the Met stating in 2006 that the repatriation "redresses past improprieties in the acquisitions process". Source: Internet
As the EU begins to repatriate Senegalese migrants back to their land, it continues to exploit the country's fishery resources, the scarcity of which is partly the cause of the despair of thousands of young Senegalese. Source: Internet
A Zimbabwean delegation dispatched to the United Kingdom to repatriate the heads of Mbuya Nehanda, Sekuru Kaguvi and others has located 13 heads among them, those of the two most prominent First Chimurenga icons. Source: Internet
Furthermore, the Spartans were obliged to repatriate Themistocles in order to free their own ambassadors. Source: Internet
Coffey said NAGPRA gave tribes “the right to repatriate these remains which were taken with no thought of human decency, either by collectors or by archaeologists from museums and put on display." Source: Internet
A special flight of Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) to repatriate nationals stranded in the United States will depart from Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport on June 14, it emerged on Sunday. Source: Internet