[
UK
/ɹɪləʊkˈeɪt/
]
[ US /ˌɹiˈɫoʊkeɪt/ ]
[ US /ˌɹiˈɫoʊkeɪt/ ]
VERB
-
move or establish in a new location
We had to relocate the office because the rent was too high -
become established in a new location
Our company relocated to the Midwest
How To Use relocate In A Sentence
- At this point IWN relocated from Jerusalem to Ramat Gan, a move which inevitably led to a certain weakening of the relationship with Knesset members. Israel Women's Network.
- Having successfully relocated the bridge, there's no job too big for the nation's favourite brickies.
- My response to those accusations was to relocate to Madrid – the only city in Europe where I could unravel the Islamic Andalusian influences that pervade Spanish culture.
- The district has "reconfigured" a number of schools and relocated programs to address declining enrollment, cope with state budget cuts and offer greater educational opportunities in the 220-square-mile district. Azcentral.com | news
- In 2004, following an airliner crash in Sharm-El-Sheikh, the French Navy hired GPS equipment to relocate the black boxes' pingers, Hubert said.
- Hadn't he been telling himself it was time to move on while he was still young enough to relocate ? EVERVILLE
- The umbilicus was relocated, defatted and sutured with 4-0 PDS sutures at the 2, 4, 8 and 10 o'clock positions to create an innie.
- Originally set in a military hospital during the Blitz in 1941, the film relocates the action to a civilian emergency hospital during the doodlebug campaign of 1944.
- We even relocate daybreak and sunset, which, one might surmise, are logical ways to determine the beginning and end of a given day, within the compass of clock-time.
- If Acosta and Nuñez somewhat sophisticated it, two nights later Johan Kobborg and Alina Cojocaru - yet another first-timer - relocated its Arcadian heart.