expiree
See also: expirée
English
Etymology
From expire + -ee.
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
expiree (plural expirees)
- (Australia, historical) In penal colonies of early Australia, a convict whose sentence had been served.[1]
- 1984, Lloyd Evans, Paul Llewellyn Nicholls, Convicts and Colonial Society, 1788-1868, page 276,
- According to the census of 1870 the number of men still under the charge of the authorities is about four thousand, including those still in confinement; expirees being classed as free men.
- 1985, University of Western Australia, Westerly, volume 30, page 248:
- Most of them secured a husband within a year or so, but more remarkable is the fact that expirees competed very successfully against the colonial boys for brides. This was despite the knowledge that a woman who married an expiree lost her claim to respectability.
- 1995, Royal Australian Historical Society, Journal of the Royal Australian Historical Society, volume 81, page 37:
- Many old expirees received terminal or geriatric care in the Society′s Asylum, but there was a gap between the expiration of their sentences and their requiring terminal care during which time they depended upon their own resources.
- 1984, Lloyd Evans, Paul Llewellyn Nicholls, Convicts and Colonial Society, 1788-1868, page 276,
See also
- emancipist
References
- 1916, Ernest Scott, A Short History of Australia, Chapter V, .