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the emigrating
verb
To leave the country in which one lives, especially one's native country, in order to reside elsewhere.
Exact(20)
Muslims have begun replacing the emigrating Christians, and now Malula — once entirely Christian — is almost half Muslim, residents say.
The emigrating mother was trained as a bank associate but ends up working at a White Castle.
After 1860 the church began sending wagon companies east each spring, to return to Utah in the summer with the emigrating Latter-day Saints. Latter-day Saints
The Cambridge Agreement, which enabled the emigrating shareholders to buy out those that remained behind, may have been written by Dudley.
He has spoken often about revising trade agreements to reduce our trade deficit, but he's not going to take on the opposition of the emigrating giant global corporations to reduce our trade deficit.
The emigrating cell number and expected migration distance are closely correlated (r = 0.984, P<0.001).
Similar(35)
Are the people emigrating from Mexico to the US rapists and criminals?
With the hope of emigrating in the early 1990's, many left their villages for the cities.
The family emigrated at the turn of the century, moving from the Lower East Side to East Harlem to Brooklyn.
During the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, the family emigrated to the United States.
Most of the designers emigrated to the United States, taking the school's ideals with them.
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