Definition of Remigration

1. n. Migration back to the place from which one came.

Definition of Remigration

1. Noun. Migration back to the place from which one came. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Remigration

1. migration [n -S] - See also: migration

Lexicographical Neighbors of Remigration

remethylate
remethylated
remethylation
remex
remifentanil
remiform
remigate
remigated
remigates
remiges
remigial
remigrate
remigrated
remigrates
remigrating
remigration (current term)
remigrations
remikiren
remilitarisation
remilitarise
remilitarization
remilitarizations
remilitarize
remilitarized
remilitarizes
remilitarizing
remind
reminded
reminder
reminder system

Literary usage of Remigration

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Brewing and Liquor Interests and German and Bolshevik Propaganda: Report of by Lee Slater Overman (1919)
"The next most important thing was to promote remigration. and there is a very ... how Hungary is to stimulate remigration after the war, and making the very ..."

2. Brewing and Liquor Interests and German Propaganda: Hearings Before a by United States Brewers' Association (1919)
"Senator NELSON. From the Government ? The next most important thing was to promote remigration, and there is a very clever essay by ..."

3. Employment Effects of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA by DIANE Publishing Company (1994)
"It is noteworthy in scenarios F. and H. that US welfare declines and Mexican welfare rises when there is a remigration of workers from the United States to ..."

4. Brewing and Liquor Interests and German Propaganda: Hearings Before a by United States Brewers' Association (1919)
"... to let it lift and to Americanize it, and he said, instead of using it as an in-" ment to promote remigration and the taking up of the ..."

5. Origin of Species by Charles Darwin (1902)
"... of them: for the first migration when the cold came on, and the remigration on the returning warmth, would generally have been due south and north. ..."

6. American Anthropologist by American Anthropological Association (1902)
"If the composite bow originated in the north, it must have been perfected in the south, but with the remigration of peoples to the north became again ..."

7. Encyclopaedia Britannica, a Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and edited by Hugh Chisholm (1910)
"... in the United States at the end of 1907 were estimated at between 136000 and 138000; this number was considerably reduced in 1908 by remigration. ..."

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