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Synonyms

migrate

American  
[mahy-greyt] / ˈmaɪ greɪt /

verb (used without object)

migrated, migrating
  1. to go from one country, region, or place to another.

    Synonyms:
    relocate, move
    Antonyms:
    stay, remain
  2. to pass periodically from one region or climate to another, as certain birds, fishes, and animals.

    The birds migrate southward in the winter.

  3. to shift, as from one system, mode of operation, or enterprise to another.

  4. Physiology. (of a cell, tissue, etc.) to move from one region of the body to another, as in embryonic development.

  5. Chemistry.

    1. (of ions) to move toward an electrode during electrolysis.

    2. (of atoms within a molecule) to change position.

  6. (at British universities) to change or transfer from one college to another.


migrate British  
/ maɪˈɡreɪt /

verb

  1. to go from one region, country, or place of abode to settle in another, esp in a foreign country

  2. (of birds, fishes, etc) to journey between different areas at specific times of the year

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Related Words

Migrate, emigrate, immigrate are used of changing one's abode from one country or part of a country to another. To migrate is to make such a move either once or repeatedly: to migrate from Ireland to the United States. To emigrate is to leave a country, usually one's own (and take up residence in another): Each year many people emigrate from Europe. To immigrate is to enter and settle in a country not one's own: There are many inducements to immigrate to South America. Migrate is applied both to people or to animals that move from one region to another, especially periodically; the other terms are generally applied to movements of people.

Other Word Forms

  • intermigrate verb (used without object)
  • migrator noun
  • nonmigrating adjective
  • remigrate verb (used without object)
  • unmigrating adjective

Etymology

Origin of migrate

First recorded in 1690–1700; from Latin migrātus (past participle of migrāre “to move from place to place, change position or abode”), equivalent to migrā- verb stem + -tus past participle suffix

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

If defense contractors continue migrating toward service-heavy revenue mixes, the sector’s risk profile may increasingly resemble infrastructure rather than crisis trade.

From MarketWatch

They eventually diverged, with anatomically modern humans evolving in Africa, and Neanderthals migrating across Eurasia.

From Barron's

She had legally migrated here with her family from Ukraine and was working in a pizzeria.

From The Wall Street Journal

“The binding constraints are migrating into the physical layer: materials science, molecular engineering, and specialty chemistry.”

From Barron's

These artifacts come from a time long before formal writing, when Homo sapiens had recently migrated from Africa into Europe and encountered Neanderthals.

From Science Daily