Emigrations

Word EMIGRATIONS
Character 11
Hyphenation N/A
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Emigrations"

What do we mean by emigrations?

The act of emigrating; movement of a person or persons out of a country or national region, for the purpose of permanent relocation of residence.

A body of emigrants; emigrants collectively

Emigrate is the name of a band led by Richard Z. Kruspe, guitarist and founder of Rammstein. Kruspe started the band in 2005, when Rammstein decided to take a year off from touring and recording. In many interviews, Kruspe says the idea for Emigrate came to him around Rammstein's Mutter era. Urban Dictionary

A weird spelling of immigrant. lmao Urban Dictionary

Synonyms and Antonyms for Emigrations

  • Synonyms for emigrations
  • Emigrations synonyms not found!!!
  • Antonyms for emigrations
  • Emigrations antonyms not found!

The word "emigrations" in example sentences

The entire aboriginal population of Florida, of the mission period, numbering perhaps 30,000, is long since extinct without descendants, the Seminole being a later emigrations from the Creeks. ❋ 1840-1916 (1913)

Second, I was thinking about the evidence that chimpanzees have an incest taboo, expressed both through female emigrations (females predictably leave their birth communities) and through simpler acts of choice (males will usually try to mate with every female in the community except their mothers, sisters will powerfully resist any advances from their brothers). ❋ Dale Peterson (2011)

If any other factors accounted for the increase of women to the labor force, I'd have to suggest only that emigrations during the period may have brought in demographics of young, unmarried women with fewer constraints, or married families with women emigrating with renewed energy and hope that reinforced the innovations going on at the time. ❋ Unknown (2009)

A second wave of emigrations of Ashkenazic Jews from Eastern Europe at the end of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries brought larger numbers of Yiddish-speaking, traditional Orthodox Jews into the Seattle community. ❋ Unknown (2010)

Interest has been on the “brain-drain” problems associated with the emigrations clouding the advantages of such movements. ❋ Unknown (2007)

They set out either on their own iniciative or because they had been summoned by spiritual or secular leader to fulfil every type of musical function; their emigrations were encouraged by the unstable political situation in the Low Countries at that time. ❋ Lu (2009)

A few generations ago, government oppressions of some of those First World countries in Europe spawned massive emigrations to the United States. ❋ Unknown (2009)

Fischer's thesis, in Albion's Seed, is that the four major emigrations from England to the US came from four distinct regions and cultures in ❋ Unknown (2008)

One of Fischer's best points is that each of the British emigrations occurred at a different stage of British as well as American history, and grew out of different dissatisfactions with life in the British ❋ Unknown (2008)

Wedgwood and other manufacturers complained of factory visitors presenting themselves as idle, curious visitors but who might have been making a tour of production houses, asking questions on behalf of a rival manufacturer, perhaps even a local one. 25 As a technique to exchange information, industrial espionage was not significantly different from the legal, often temporary, emigrations of specialist workers. ❋ Unknown (2006)

The estimated 30m individual records include details of emigrations to Australia, North and South America, India and Africa. ❋ Unknown (2006)

And whence have we received our vague information respecting these emigrations? ❋ Unknown (2007)

The last great trail drives from the Southwest were not drives to markets, but emigrations from a closed range to the last great open range in the United States. ❋ DEE BROWN (2007)

These shades and specters haunted the traditional historiography on Irish emigrations. ❋ Unknown (2005)

During the emigrations westward in the late nineteenth century and on through the first three decades of the twentieth, Iowans really were Iowan, Bostonians Bostonian, and California another world; up until the 1940s, there were state societies in Southern California for transplants from all the other existing states, societies that held picnics and potlucks and provided California information for new settlers from the home state. ❋ Amy Wilentz (2006)

This suggests that there were at least two separate emigrations of modern humans from Africa, Dr. Underhill said. ❋ Zoe Brain (2005)

The Boers have generally manifested a marked antipathy to any thing but “long-shot” warfare, and, sidling away in their emigrations toward the more effeminate Bechuanas, have left their quarrels with the Caffres to be settled by the English, and their wars to be paid for by English gold. ❋ Unknown (2004)

The master, who appeared to be a man of some information, on being told the destination of our fleet, gave it as his opinion, that if a reception could be secured, emigrations would take place to New South Wales, not only from the old continent, but the new one, where the spirit of adventure and thirst for novelty were excessive. ❋ Unknown (2003)

somebody#1:dude did you hear My World by Emigrate somebody#2:[Yeahh] its awesome somebody#1:[I know but] [Rammstein] is the best ❋ Johnny Last (2008)

She is an [immigrant] as she was born [in Paris] and now lives in Pakistan. a person who leaves their own country in order to settle permanently in another. "she was a Polish emigrant who came to Scotland during the Second [World War]" ❋ Lmaowhatamidoingidk (2020)

Cross Reference for Emigrations

  • Emigrations cross reference not found!

What does emigrations mean?

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