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Picasso, for most of his life
Answer for the clue "Picasso, for most of his life ", 10 letters:
expatriate
Alternative clues for the word expatriate
Word definitions for expatriate in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
An expatriate (often shortened to expat ) is a person temporarily or permanently residing , as an immigrant , in a country other than that of their citizenship. The word comes from the Latin terms ex ("out of") and patria ("country, fatherland"). In common ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Expatriate \Ex*pa"tri*ate\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Expatriated ; p. pr. & vb. n. Expatriating .] [LL. expatriatus, p. p. of expatriare; L. ex out + patria fatherland, native land, fr. pater father. See Patriot .] To banish; to drive or force (a person) from ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
Of, or relating to, people who are expatriates. n. 1 One who lives outside one’s own country. 2 One who has been banished from one’s own country. v 1 (context transitive English) To banish; to drive or force (a person) from his own country; to make an exile ...
Usage examples of expatriate.
The scarf and the trousers were the uniform of the young travelers who generally stayed in the expatriate enclave of Temal: It seemed that they all bought them immediately upon arrival in order to identify themselves to each other.
This appreciation for the connection between universal rights and national rights, which he first began to acquire as an expatriate soldier in the American Revolution, enabled Lafayette to become that exceptional link between generations and encouraged him to support every national revolution in the Western world.
The only Pole on the committee was an expatriate journalist named Leonard Chodzko, who had served as an aide to Lafayette during and after the July Revolution.
Not all the dishes were from Indiain fact, the party would have a rather eclectic mix of Indian, British, and French dishes, for Gopal was trading lessons in Indian cuisine for those in Continental cooking with an expatriate Parisian cook he had come to be acquainted with.
To make his point, he brought up his Anglo friends in the expatriate community.
The expatriate community lived just across the bay, in Jimmy-Jim Town.
It is, perhaps, a truth of expatriate children that rather than grow up with two civilizations, they grow up with less than one, unable somehow to plug in the civilization at home with the big one around.
Sometimes they worked out together in the shabby little gym in Bloomsbury run by a Hungarian expatriate who had fled his own country after the abortive rising.
Santa Rosa could be believed, our government had removed restrictions against the purchase of weapons by expatriate Cubans in Florida.
Here in his multimillion-dollar mansion, with a fortune in art hanging on his walls, this expatriate shares something with the poorest convict pacing out a cell in Angola or Parchman.
John pumps his fist in a victory sign, a memory of the old French expatriate standing before his great window comes into my mind, his cultured voice telling me about my father and the glory days in Vietnam.
Just as before, the tanned, silver-haired French expatriate stands framed in the lower corner of his window, staring out to sea like a man with an unquenchable yearning.
But if you wish to make a race endure, rely upon it you should expatriate them.
I would have pursued the question, but at that moment I noticed a group of expatriates strolling toward us along the beach.
The expatriates were gawping at us, and their astonishment reoriented me.