different between migration vs genographic
migration
English
Etymology
From Middle French migration and its source, Latin migr?ti?, from the participle stem of migr? (“I migrate”).Morphologically migrate +? -ion
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ma????e??(?)n/
- Rhymes: -e???n
Noun
migration (countable and uncountable, plural migrations)
- An instance of moving to live in another place for a while.
- Seasonal moving of animals, as mammals, birds or fish, especially between breeding and non-breeding areas.
- Movement in general.
- The migration of lead from a can to the food inside it can cause lead poisoning.
- (computing) Instance of changing a platform from an environment to another one.
- (biochemistry) The movement of cells in particular directions to specific locations.
Derived terms
- chain migration
- internal migration
- loop migration
- mass migration
- relay migration
- stepwise migration
Related terms
- emigration
- migrant
- migrate
- migratory
- immigration
- inmigration, in-migration
- outmigration, out-migration
- porting
Translations
French
Etymology
From Latin migr?ti?.
Pronunciation
Noun
migration f (plural migrations)
- migration (of animals)
- migration (of people)
Related terms
- migrer
Further reading
- “migration” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Middle French
Noun
migration f (plural migrations)
- migration (movement from one place to another)
Swedish
Etymology
From Latin migr?ti?, from migr? (“I migrate”) + -?ti?.
Noun
migration c
- migration; an instance of moving to live in another place for a while, often used in regards of immigration
- (biology) migration; seasonal moving for animals, as birds or fishes, to breed or find a new home
- (computing) migration; instance of changing a platform from an environment to another one
Declension
Derived terms
- Migrationsverket
- migrationspolitik
Related terms
- migrera
- migrant
- immigration
- emigration
References
- migration in Nationalencyklopedin (needs an authorization fee).
migration From the web:
- what migration means
- what migration patterns are seen in europe
- what migrations occurred as a result of industrialization
- what migration certificate
- what are examples of migration
- why do migrants migrate
genographic
English
Etymology
Blend of genetic +? geographic.
Adjective
genographic (comparative more genographic, superlative most genographic)
- of the use of genetics to study human migration over time
genographic From the web:
- what is genographic project
- what is genographic mean
- what does genographic
- what is the genographic project gcse
- what does the genographic mean
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