Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Third-person singular simple present indicative form of
migrate .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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The story migrates from the art world to the world of adventurous archaeologists as Kristi is drawn ever-deeper into the crime surrounding the disappearance of the model and the artist.
REVIEW: Down These Dark Spaceways edited by Mike Resnick 2006
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Those animals were part of the herd, at least 500 strong, that migrates from the Yellowstone country through the Green River Valley and down into the Red Desert, the longest mammal migration in the continental United States.
Energy Development is Ruining Public Hunting Grounds in the West 2006
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The slave women's duet ( "The white man comes"), starting a long vocal ensemble of continuous music for Scene 1, migrates from the bitter memories of being taken from home and passing from hand to hand, to the sanctuary of the plantation and a kind master.
Savage Boundaries 2002
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The most troublesome inconsistencies in transliteration seem to be owing either to the human tendency to conceal doubt behind abundance or to multiple naturalizations as the name migrates across Europe.
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And Berman’s habit of employing abstractions and making them act like real people e.g., a term migrates, an idealism tries to refashion ways of life, etc. exemplifies the sort of writing that Tocqueville believed would characterize democratic societies.
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And Berman’s habit of employing abstractions and making them act like real people e.g., a term migrates, an idealism tries to refashion ways of life, etc. exemplifies the sort of writing that Tocqueville believed would characterize democratic societies.
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It’s about a society where everyone migrates from the city to the country and back again and is almost a uptopian story.
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"I think certainly anytime a marquee name migrates to a new location, in that geography it creates new opportunity, companies looking to tap into the hype before the athlete has proven himself to do what he's there to do: to win football games," said Paul Swangard, a sports marketing expert at the University of Oregon.
Selling the city on a quarterback hoping to land a big score on the field and in business 2010
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"I think certainly anytime a marquee name migrates to a new location, in that geography it creates new opportunity, companies looking to tap into the hype before the athlete has proven himself to do what he's there to do: to win football games," said Paul Swangard, a sports marketing expert at the University of Oregon.
Selling the city on a quarterback hoping to land a big score on the field and in business 2010
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The only difference is it kind of migrates from north-to-south, depending on the season.
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