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relocation

/ree-loh-key shuhn/US // ˌri loʊˈkeɪ ʃən //

搬迁,迁址,迁居,重新安置

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the act or process of moving to a different place:The company’s relocation overseas would result in the loss of over 300 jobs.Will I receive reimbursement for the expenses associated with my relocation to Chicago?

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The Cowboys, meanwhile, are trying to reduce the potential for an outbreak by relocating coaches and staff whose duties place them in direct contact with players to a hotel.

  • The experience, though, filled with frequent travel complications, made it necessary for the Class AAA affiliate to relocate.

  • More than 40,000 people have been forced to relocate from a fifth.

  • Companies want new hires to relocate as soon as it’s safe, she says, and that’s especially the case for senior leaders.

  • So anesthesiologists who are experts at using ventilators are being relocated to intensive care.

  • Production relocation to Africa and South America have allowed Chinese enterprises to circumvent trade caps.

  • Lohan recently told BBC News that she is considering a full-time relocation to London.

  • Maariv, p. 1/NRG Hebrew)  Netanyahu's point man on Bedouin relocation says plan still on track - Maj. Gen. (res.

  • It is now impossible for such a relocation to happen, but this does not mean it is time to give up the fight.

  • However a relocation of the royal family to Anglesey would be a huge break with protocol.

  • Mom's a freelance relocation specialist who helps British people get settled in in San Francisco.

  • And in making your relocation did you again pass through the graveyard?

  • This new migration was reinforced by the relocation of entire families.

  • The precise relocation of our boundary line is needful, and adequate appropriation is now recommended.

  • The "notice" was already up, the "relocation" of our mine completed beyond recall, and the crowd rapidly dispersing.