expat
expat — noun
1. someone who has chosen to settle temporarily in a foreign nation, typically for
someone who has chosen to settle temporarily in a foreign nation, typically for employment or a change of lifestyle
Rachid spent eight years in Bangkok as an expat working for a French airline.
expat + working for [employer] describes the reason for living abroad
The expat community in Dubai organises weekly social events for new arrivals.
collocation: expat community
After retiring early, Tuan and his wife became expats in a small Portuguese fishing village.
Many expats find that learning the local language helps them adjust more quickly.
Salma met several other expats at the international school where her children now study.
- expatriate
the full, more formal form of the same word; preferred in official documents and news reports
- foreigner
much broader — includes tourists, students, and short-term visitors, not just temporary residents
- overseas worker
specifically emphasises employment as the reason for living abroad; less common in casual speech
文法句型
often 'an expat' or 'expats'
用法筆記
Frequently contrasted with 'immigrant': an expat is generally understood to have moved voluntarily and plans to return home, while an immigrant intends permanent settlement. The word is less common in formal academic or government writing, where 'expatriate' or 'overseas national' may be preferred.