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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

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
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