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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Emigrated

Emigrate \Em"i*grate\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Emigrated; p. pr. & vb. n. Emigrating.] [L. emigratus, p. p. of emigrare to remove, emigrate; e out + migrare to migrate. See Migrate.] To remove from one country or State to another, for the purpose of residence; to migrate from home.

Forced to emigrate in a body to Americ


  1. --Macaulay.

    They [the Huns] were emigrating from Tartary into Europe in the time of the Goths.
    --J. H. Newman.

Wiktionary
emigrated

vb. (en-past of: emigrate)

Usage examples of "emigrated".

They returned very shortly with two women in the direction of the city, saying that Peterson had refused them admittance, explaining that Chatterford had emigrated, and these more sensible women had begged transportation into London.

Grigory Landau, a philosopher before he emigrated and a man whose mind Nabokov greatly respected.

In 1912 he emigrated from Soviet Russia because conditions there made it hard for him to work.

In 1917 he escaped the Revolution by travelling with his mother to the Caucasus and then emigrated via Vladivostok and Japan to the United States.

Cominges, one of those who went with him to the military school at Paris, and who had emigrated, was at Bale.

A group of new scholars is pushing the line that the ancestors of our horse developed in America only as far as mesohippus, which then emigrated to Asia, where it developed into the horse proper, in the form of the Appaloosa, which thus becomes the great ancestor of subsequent breeds.

But the greater scholars like Stout and Schultz, both of Nebraska, believe that he originated from American stock dating far back and that he emigrated over the land bridge to Asia to develop collaterally there.

Indians were really the cream of Welsh society which at an early period in history had emigrated to America in search of a more natural existence, and he was convinced that somewhere just beyond the visible horizon he would come upon the noble Welshman-Indian he sought.

Millions of these publications circulated throughout America and Europe, and if a man had even a shred of interest in the soil, his expectations were bound to be aroused, for the corn raised by Farmer Bigley, who had emigrated from Illinois, stood seven feet tall and the melons produced by Farmer Wright were so big they could scarcely be lifted.

The farmers who had emigrated from Ottumwa were astonished to see him, for it was Thomas Dole Creevey, now an old man who had lived to see the desolation he had fathered.

Alaska and Asia, this horse had emigrated from Colorado to the old world.

The catastrophic decline in the Indian population, partly because of Spanish cruelty, partly because of imported disease, affected the labour supply, while some 200,000 Spaniards may have emigrated to America during the sixteenth century.

Huguenots emigrated to America after Louis XIV withdrew toleration in 1685.

In any case, so many have emigrated and made themselves quite at home on Marn.

But by being very careful and making small shipments to those who had already emigrated, they had succeeded in transferring enough material and agents to do what needed to be done.