relocate
IPA: riɫˈoʊkeɪt
verb
- (transitive) to move (something) from one place to another.
- (intransitive) to change one's domicile or place of business.
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Examples of "relocate" in Sentences
- April 2009: Both titles relocate from Canary Wharf to the
- Some were willing to relocate from the other end of the country.
- "We would have to relocate, which is not really viable," she said.
- Heck, let’s even let the ones who win relocate there, since it’s so much safer.
- Spooky's mom sent us a link to an adorable photo she'd taken of a four-foot-long Northern Black Racer (Coluber constrictor constrictor) she'd had to relocate from the strawberry patch.
- And the Second Avenue Deli always made money hand over fist, so if this new rent really wrankled him, why not suffer under it for a while until you find a place to relocate, which is what he has said he plans to do?
- The traditional method for a homeowner to relocate is to put their house on the market, receive an offer, sell their home to someone else who gets a new mortgage, move and buy another home with a new mortgage of their own.
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