to remove (an alien) forcibly from a country; expel to conduct, hold, or behave (oneself) in a specified manner 
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2025
de•port /dɪˈpɔrt/USA pronunciation  
v. 
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025- [ ~ + obj] to expel (an alien) from a country; banish:The federal authorities deported him for illegal entry.
 - [ ~ + oneself] to behave in a particular manner;
to carry oneself in a certain way:The young children deported themselves perfectly. 
de•port 
(di pôrt′, -pōrt′),USA pronunciation v.t. 
 de•port′a•ble, adj. 
de′por•tee′, n.
de•port′er, n.
- to expel (an alien) from a country;
banish. - to send or carry off;
transport, esp. forcibly:The country deported its criminals. - to bear, conduct, or behave (oneself ) in a particular manner.
 
- Latin dēportāre to carry away, banish oneself, equivalent. to dē- de- + portāre to carry; see port5
 - Middle French déporter
 - 1475–85
 
de′por•tee′, n.
de•port′er, n.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
'deport' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
McCarran-Walter Act
 - banish
 - behave
 - comport
 - conduct
 - deportation
 - deportment
 - exile
 - nondeportable
 - nondeported
 - transport
 - undeported