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relocate
[ ree-loh-keyt, ree-loh-keyt ]
verb (used with object)
- to move (a building, company, etc.) to a different location:
plans to relocate the firm to Houston.
verb (used without object)
- to change one's residence or place of business; move:
Next year we may relocate to Denver.
relocate
/ ËŒ°ù¾±Ë±ôəʊˈ°ì±ðɪ³Ù /
verb
- to move or be moved to a new place, esp (of an employee, a business, etc) to a new area or place of employment
- intr (of an employee, a business, etc) to move for reasons of business to a new area or place of employment
Derived Forms
- ËŒ°ù±ð±ô´Çˈ³¦²¹³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô, noun
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- °ù±ð·±ô´Ç·³¦²¹Â·³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô [ree-loh-, key, -sh, uh, n], noun
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Example Sentences
While Mr Ricks said he thought it may encourage some companies to relocate some manufacturing, he was doubtful it would also create hundreds of billions in additional revenue for the US promised by President Trump.
But Disney has spent the past year taking steps to relocate teams to Burbank, where Disney has its own historic studio lot and an adjoining complex that houses ABC and Disney Animation.
“It could best be described as a collective triumph,†said John Evans, head of Village School, which relocated its roughly 250 students to Colorado Center.
A flashback shows the pair arguing over their living situation; he’s enthusiastic about relocating the family to the farmhouse, and she’s preemptively suffocating from seclusion’s effects on her work as an artist.
Her family has been meaning to relocate to Nigeria for a while but has not done so earlier because of the children's education.
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