Online Google Dictionary

resettle 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/rēˈsetl/,
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resettled, past participle; resettled, past tense; resettling, present participle; resettles, 3rd person singular present;
  1. Settle or cause to settle in a different place
    • - they offered to resettle 300,000 refugees
    • - 144,000 East Germans had resettled in West Germany

  1. settle in a new place; "The immigrants had to resettle"
  2. (resettled) relocated: settled in a new location
  3. (resettlement) the transportation of people (as a family or colony) to a new settlement (as after an upheaval of some kind)
  4. (Resettlement) Human migration is physical movement by humans from one area to another, sometimes over long distances or in large groups. ...
  5. (Resettlement (Newfoundland)) Resettlement in Newfoundland and Labrador terms was an organized approach to centralize the population into growth areas. ...
  6. (Resettlement) “The transfer of refugees from the country in which they have sought refuge to another State that has agreed to admit them. ...
  7. (Resettlement) German euphemism for the deportation of prisoners to killing centers in Poland.
  8. (Resettlement) a term used by the War Relocation Authority to refer to the migration of Japanese Americans from the incarceration camps in which they were imprisoned during World War II. ...
  9. (Resettlement) (refugee):A durable solution for an asylum seeker such that results in her/his consensual relocation to a destination country, where authorities accept the asylum seeker as an immigrant for the purpose of permanent residence and naturalization (i.e., citizenship).
  10. (Resettlement) A long-term protective action in which people are kept out of a contaminated area permanently. Also called permanent relocation.
  11. (Resettlement) A term used to describe the resettlement of internally displaced people to new residential locations.
  12. (Resettlement) In the 1980s, China passed regulations to protect the rights of those displaced by the dam projects and assure them of adequate compensation. ...
  13. (Resettlement) Jareth says that the resettlement of the Regressives is voluntary and that the Regressives want to go; Dathan says that there has not been any contact with the alleged Regressive colony; he thinks that the Regressives are not really being resettled, but just vaporized in a thermal ...
  14. (Resettlement) Permanent relocation of refugees in a place outside their country of origin to allow them to establish residence and become productive members of society there. ...
  15. (Resettlement) Process of preparing an inmate for returning to the community after release
  16. (Resettlement) Refers to a long tradition of work which aims to reintegrate imprisoned offenders back into the community.
  17. (Resettlement) applies to the relocation of a population. Used negatively, the term refers to the policy of forcible removal of people from their homes and relocating them in another area for developmental or political reasons. ...
  18. (resettlement) At the end of the war Japanese Canadians were strongly pressured to establish themselves outside of British Columbia. Over 9,000 Japanese Canadians made new homes in Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontario. ...