Sentence examples for frequent relocations from inspiring English sources

Exact(10)

Frequent relocations create problems adjusting to new schools.

Each move represented a promotion, but the frequent relocations took a predictable toll on her romantic life.

The family's frequent relocations, as well as the accidental blinding of his brother, further disrupted his childhood.

Like their namesakes, Bernstein's parents fought bitterly, and their acrimony often resulted from the family's frequent relocations; as Sam made more money, their houses grew larger.

SOME pointed to the company's practice of grooming talent through frequent relocations, saying that it was tougher on women, and unappealing to minority managers, who would have to drag spouses and children to parochial towns.

Teacher quality may be the most important variable within schools, but mountains of data, going back decades, demonstrates that most of the variation in student performance is explained by nonschool factors: not just poverty, but also parental literacy (and whether parents read to their children), student health, frequent relocations, crime-­related stress and the like.

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Similar(47)

Must not mind the hassles of frequent relocation, such as bubble-wrapping breakables, filing change-of-address forms and dealing with cable and Internet service providers.

Molly: By nature, the military requires frequent relocation, so the spouses who want to continue working have traditionally found roles that are needed in any and every town, like nurses, teachers, or real estate agents.

His story provides hope for those who continue to deal with the rampant race issues, homophobia that results in the abuse of LGBT foster children and the denial of adoptive opportunities for LGBT potential parents, problems in education stemming from emotional stress and frequent relocation, and health hazards that result from neglect and abuse that plague the foster care system.

This includes the ability to appropriately translate material but also address the frequent relocation of parents and children within certain locations in trying to give a consistent message.

A recent review of risk and resilience factors for military families concluded that the stressful effects of military life on child outcomes (including frequent relocation, parental deployment, and parental PTSD) are largely mediated by the quality of the parent child relationship and interactions.

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