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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Relocation

Relocation \Re`lo*ca"tion\ (r?`l[hand]-k?"sh?n), n.

  1. A second location.

  2. (Roman & Scots Law) Renewal of a lease.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
relocation

1746, in Scottish law, "renewal of a lease," noun of action from relocate. Meaning "act of relocating" is from 1837.

Wiktionary
relocation

n. 1 The act of moving from one place to another. 2 (l en renewal Renewal) of a lease.

WordNet
relocation
  1. n. the transportation of people (as a family or colony) to a new settlement (as after an upheaval of some kind) [syn: resettlement, transplantation]

  2. the act of changing your residence or place of business; "they say that three moves equal one fire" [syn: move]

Wikipedia
Relocation (computing)

Relocation is the process of assigning load addresses to various parts of a program and adjusting the code and data in the program to reflect the assigned addresses. A linker usually performs relocation in conjunction with symbol resolution, the process of searching files and libraries to replace symbolic references or names of libraries with actual usable addresses in memory before running a program.

Relocation is typically done by the linker at link time, but it can also be done at run time by a relocating loader, or by the running program itself. Some architectures avoid relocation entirely by deferring address assignment to run time; this is known as zero address arithmetic.

Relocation

Relocation may refer to:

  • Relocation (computer science)
  • Relocation of professional sports teams
  • Relocation (personal), the process of vacating a fixed residence in favour of another
  • Population transfer
  • Rental relocation
  • Structure relocation
Relocation (personal)

Relocation, also known as moving, is the process of vacating a fixed location (such as a residence or business) and settling in a different one. A move can be to a nearby location within the same neighborhood, a much farther location in a different city, or sometimes a different country. It usually includes packing up all belongings, transferring to the new home, and unpacking, as well as administrative or bureaucratic tasks, such as changing registration data, change of insurance, services etc.

Usage examples of "relocation".

She had just returned from duty with the team informing the largest of the human primitivist communities of their imminent relocation, and trying to secure their voluntary cooperation.

Morocco was tough and getting tougher, but violently anti-Israel, sometime Maoist-leaning Algeria made any relocation assignment practically a suicide mission.

July twelfth Norman Ashkenazi drove the old Ford of the Israeli relocation team from Sousse to Ez-Zahra to tell Sharon Hoyt that it was Bastille Day and they ought to celebrate by having a picnic and going to the beach.

The Bahamian government and the medical community on the island have been very supportive of our relocation.

Indian Relocation Act exiled them from their land-all the Choctaw and Chickamauga and Cherokee and Chickasaw-and U.

When they had first arrived, Sela had questioned them as to how they had found the hideaway, so as to know whether or not their security was threatened and a relocation necessary.

He still wins too often for my comfort and each day I fear the men will flush him out in his use of relocation.

In spite of the relocation of the family out West, the Ramseys still essentially considered themselves Atlantans, and Patsy, a native West Virginian who had represented the state in the Miss America pageant, missed many aspects of the Southern lifestyle.

Besides, I expect that he might have hit a bit more resistance if his realm had been in sunnier climes and he was proposing relocation to somewhere in the Frozen North.

Plantation, but it was discovered that the White House had already taken the name to use as a codeword for emergency relocation.

When he had been demoted, Buck had considered the relocation from New York to Chicago a positive turn—he would get to see more of her, he'd be in a good church, get good training, have a core of friends.

When he had been demoted, Buck had considered the relocation from New York to Chicago a positive turn-he would get to see more of her, he'd be in a good church, get good training, have a core of friends.

Only to Bethany Beach every summer, and that was not so much a trip as a kind of relocation of home base, with Sarah sunbathing and Ethan joining other Baltimore boys, also relocated, and Macon happily tightening all the doorknobs in their rented cottage or unsticking the windows or-one blissful year-solving a knotty problem he'd discovered in the plumbing.

There are also the Brunswick Shriners, Moral Regurgitation, Citizens against Infant Sexuality, the Crack House Integration of the Black Lotus Society, the Misplaced Bolivian Wild Animal Relocation Fund, the Laurel Foundation for the Recognition of Unique Achievement, the Gould Charitable Trust for Dynamic Population Control, the Patrio-Psychotic Anarcho-Materialism Study Group and the Sovereign State of Confusion.

Then Hvirr re-alized that what he and Emni had seen on the news was happening to others, on this continent of Mendaissa-the forced relocations that had seemed so unnecessary, so sad, so distant-were distant no longer.