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Answer for the clue "Move elsewhere ", 8 letters:
relocate

Alternative clues for the word relocate

Word definitions for relocate in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
verb COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ NOUN area ▪ Polisario announced that its forces had begun to relocate in the assembly areas allocated to them for the period of the ceasefire. ▪ Forty staff chose to relocate to the Bristol area and continued their employment ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
v. become established in a new location; "Our company relocated to the Midwest" move or establish in a new location; "We had to relocate the office because the rent was too high"

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Relocate \Re*lo"cate\ (r?-l?"k?t), v. t. To locate again.

Usage examples of relocate.

Kosovars were ambushed, Terry automatically relocated his team to a new base camp, one known only to his team.

Mike would be leaving on the weekend to relocate in the town of Astragal, Indiana.

They were probably cousins to the racoons Alex had relocated from the kitchen to Cabin Eight this morning.

Should it bear out, Director Scaur and I will be seeking authorization to relocate the defectors here, to Coruscant.

Ramsay Kent, relocated Yorkshire baronet, geologist, and adopted Absarokee married to his aunt, Hazard studied geology under the noted Swiss naturalist Agassiz, who had been invited to deliver a course of lectures at Harvard in 1847, subsequently had been offered a chair, and had stayed.

Emigrant Aid Society in Massachusetts to encourage antislavery settlers to relocate in Kansas.

When it became clear that all failed to respond acceptably to the standard medications like Prozac, Clozapine, Risperidone, all thirteen had been incarcerated at different institutions, were being steadily relocated to Blackwater as Dr.

Depending on how you looked at it, life there was either a catastrophic deracination or a useful dress rehearsal for life in the American inner cities to which many of its inhabitants would ultimately relocate.

He abjured his Greekness and relocated the navel of his empire because he thought like a king.

I wanted to give the cast and crew plenty of warning, in case they had to find work or relocate their families.

Relocating him took some moments, in part because he was but one among so many, in part because -- as I saw now when she smoothed her hair -- the white-gowned woman standing before him, back turned meward, was not Exhibit 201 but live Andromeda.

McCulloch had relocated to Chicago to take a position as director of the new research laboratory of the Neuropsychiatric Institute at the University of Illinois Medical School.

Now for the cynics out there, who might still be labouring under the mistaken opinion that relocating is merely thieving by another name, let this be said: Icarus had not become a relocator by choice.

Cathy bounced up beside him, pressed her chest into his whilst her lower tongues relocated his genitals.

A structure too massive to relocate, too delicate to risk disassembling, too dangerous and disruptive to leave where it was.