How to Use deportation in a Sentence
deportation
noun-
The mass murder, the mass rape, the mass deportation, and so on?
—Jay Nordlinger, National Review, 14 Sep. 2022
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That means mass deportations could lead to price hikes in the fruit aisle.
—Megan Cerullo, CBS News, 23 Jan. 2025
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The status will shield them from deportation for the next 18 months.
—N'dea Yancey-Bragg, USA TODAY, 1 Apr. 2022
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They had been rounded up, bound for deportation to Auschwitz, the Nazi death camp in Poland.
—Emily Langer, Washington Post, 16 June 2022
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But the first Rwanda deportation flight did not take off as planned.
—Tazreena Sajjad, The Conversation, 28 July 2022
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Along the way, the family endures the stress of police raids and the constant threat of deportation.
—Common Sense Media, Washington Post, 24 June 2022
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And yet, hundreds of migrants say they were told to stay put in them, or risk deportation.
—Jasmine Garsd, NPR, 24 June 2024
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In that case, the person would be subject to deportation.
—Sergio Martínez-Beltrán, NPR, 10 May 2024
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Now, with Trump returning to the White House, Ramos fears her mother is again at risk of deportation.
—Tyche Hendricks, NPR, 23 Dec. 2024
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Within a month the Nazis started deportations to death camps and took away our rabbi.
—Linda Chase, Sun Sentinel, 16 Jan. 2024
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The lawsuit alleges that the company used threats of deportation to keep the workers from leaving the bunkhouse.
—Kevin McGill, Anchorage Daily News, 27 Jan. 2023
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The satire of current events had Clown-in-Chief Klump holding a press conference to announce the deportation of all dogs.
—Gil Kaufman, Billboard, 29 Jan. 2024
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Who steal, want to get everything for free, be afraid of deportation?
—NBC News, 5 Jan. 2022
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But then, near the end of the book, her grandfather receives a deportation order.
—Nicolás Medina Mora, The Atlantic, 6 Aug. 2024
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The United States levied sanctions against Russians linked to the forcible deportation of Ukraine’s children.
—Natalia Abbakumova, Washington Post, 25 Aug. 2023
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This poem in translation is about the deportation of Jews from the town of Bialystok, Poland.
—New York Times, 10 Feb. 2022
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The Canadian rapper was convicted of three felony charges and faces up to 22 years in prison and deportation.
—Ashley Boucher and Lester Fabian Brathwaite, EW.com, 24 Dec. 2022
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One set of advisers saw mass deportation as the only option; the other balked at the human cost.
—Jonathan Blitzer, The New Yorker, 17 Feb. 2024
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Yet Harris has not pledged mass deportations or a crackdown anything like what Trump has called for.
—Elisabeth Buchwald and Matt Egan, CNN, 10 Sep. 2024
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His goal is to get a green card, which would relieve him of the fear of eventual deportation and give him the time to return to his former profession.
—Lydia Depillis, New York Times, 29 Feb. 2024
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Fear of deportation kept this worker at Stash’s for almost 14 years.
—Globe Columnist, BostonGlobe.com, 18 Mar. 2023
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As Science has reported, the spat led to the deportation of David Gaveau, a French landscape ecologist who worked with the agency.
—Bydyna Rochmyaningsih, science.org, 7 Oct. 2022
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Medea faces deportation; her children will stay with Jason and Creuse.
—Mark Swed, Los Angeles Times, 13 Dec. 2023
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But Miller had also spent time brainstorming how to carry out the mass deportation that hadn’t happened in Trump’s first term.
—Andrew Prokop, Vox, 26 Sep. 2024
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Those who have received a prior order for deportation also need to check in with ICE.
—Laura Rodríguez Presa, Chicago Tribune, 15 Feb. 2025
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The rest of the family was loaded onto a deportation train and understood that they were being sent to Auschwitz.
—Linda Chase, Sun Sentinel, 15 Sep. 2022
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In May, the number of Georgia migrants with new deportation cases was 4,963.
—Lautaro Grinspan, ajc, 3 July 2023
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Many Democrats assumed that Latino voters would be turned off by Trump's calls for mass deportations.
—Alex Thompson, Axios, 22 Mar. 2025
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Between the lines: Holding immigrants in detention is the largest cost of the deportation process.
—Russell Contreras, Axios, 12 Mar. 2025
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This means that anyone can be picked up and put in deportation proceedings even before their parole ends.
—Jacqueline Charles, Miami Herald, 22 Mar. 2025
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'deportation.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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