Etymology
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From Latin immigratus, past participle of immigro (“remove, move into”).
Pronunciation
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immigrate (third-person singular simple present immigrates, present participle immigrating, simple past and past participle immigrated)
- (intransitive) To move into a foreign country to stay permanently.
Antonyms
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Derived terms
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Related terms
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Translations
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to move into a foreign country or area
- Arabic: هَاجَرَ (ar) (hājara)
- Armenian: ներգաղթել (hy) (nergaġtʿel)
- Bulgarian: емигрирам (emigriram), преселвам се (preselvam se)
- Burmese: please add this translation if you can
- Catalan: immigrar (ca)
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 移民 (ji4 man4)
- Mandarin: 移民 (zh) (yímín), 移居 (zh) (yíjū)
- Danish: immigrere, indvandre
- Dutch: immigreren (nl)
- Esperanto: enmigri
- Finnish: muuttaa maahan
- French: immigrer (fr)
- German: einwandern (de), immigrieren (de)
- Hebrew: להגר (lehagér)
- Ido: enmigrar (io)
- Italian: immigrare (it)
- Japanese: 移住する (ja) (いじゅうする, ijū suru), 移民する (ja) (いみんする, imin suru)
- Khmer: ធ្វើអន្តោប្រវេសន៍ (thvəə ʼɑntaoprɑveeh)
- Lao: please add this translation if you can
- Norwegian: immigrere
- Polish: imigrować (pl)
- Portuguese: imigrar (pt)
- Russian: иммигри́ровать (ru) impf or pf (immigrírovatʹ), переселя́ться (ru) impf (pereseljátʹsja), пересели́ться (ru) pf (pereselítʹsja)
- Scottish Gaelic: dèan in-imrich
- Serbo-Croatian: imigrirati (sh), имигрирати
- Spanish: inmigrar (es)
- Swedish: immigrera (sv), invandra (sv)
- Thai: please add this translation if you can
- Tibetan: please add this translation if you can
- Turkish: göçmek (tr), göç etmek (tr)
- Vietnamese: nhập cư (vi)
- Yiddish: אײַנוואַנדערן (aynvandern)
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