domiciliate

VERB
  1. provide housing for
    The immigrants were housed in a new development outside the town
  2. make one's home in a particular place or community
    may parents reside in Florida
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use domiciliate In A Sentence

  • In sooth, the year in question had been very propitious to the immigrants; who, flocking in from eastern settlements in goodly numbers, were allowed to domiciliate themselves in their new homes, with but few exceptions, entirely unmolested by the savage foe. Ella Barnwell A Historical Romance of Border Life
  • To the Romantic sensibility such a [dualist] universe could not be endured, and the central enterprise common to many post-Kantian German philosophers and poets, as well as to Coleridge and Wordsworth, was to join together the ‘subject 'and ‘object' that modern intellection had put asunder, and thus to revivify a dead nature, restore its concreteness, significance, and human values, and re-domiciliate man in a world which had become alien to him. Byron and Romantic Occidentalism
  • Until their return to domiciliate themselves under my roof, I never heard a complaint of my house, which was situated at Brompton. Olla Podrida
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy