20 collocations for migrated

Whether it arose in Greece, or migrated thither from the East, is a point with which the ancients have left us unacquainted, though they advert to its prevalence amongst those who were called barbarians.

For this purpose, it was resolved to migrate southwards, to the banks of the broad Missouri, which no drought could sensibly affect; and there to remain until the summer heat had passed away, and the season for travelling had arrived.

How many races had preceded them remains an enigma of history not profitable to examine here, but whoever they were, or in what succession they arrived, they must, like all migrating people, have been prepared to establish themselves at the point of the spear and the edge of the sword.

The radical difference of the industrial methods in sugar from those in the other staples, however, together with the predominance of the French language, the Catholic religion and a Creole social régime in the district most favorable for sugar, made Anglo-Americans chary of the enterprise; and the revival of cotton prices after 1815 strengthened the tendency of migrating planters to stay within the cotton latitudes.

Intermittent incursions of migrating hordes from central Asia pushed their way into central and southern Europe.

Previous civilizations have been harried, hectored and undermined by migrating "barbarians" who had heard of accumulated wealth and had come to share or perhaps to take over the "honey-pot" and lick up the honey.

Others have migrated northwards, or to some other point of the compassthey are still in the old country, but the exact whereabouts is not known.

This insidious disease often terminates fatally in the cities and districts skirting the swamps of Louisiana, and, to avoid its baneful effects, the more affluent people migrate south-west or north when the sickly season sets in.

Cracks in the stone floor let in migrating bands of red ants that no disinfectant would drive away.

Much has been said of the reverence of children for their parents in the East, and tribes of people migrating therefrom, and the fifth commandment embodies the sentiment of the Eastern world.

This arises from their great flexibility, which, to compete with mocks the labours of art, and enables them to migrate thousands of miles in a season, without the slightest indications of languor or fatigue.

At the outset of such a contest, the European-Asian-African cradle of the coming western culture contained numerous political fragmentskingdoms, principalities, cities, city states, inert peasant masses, migrating tribesstruggling locally and regionally for a place in the sun, or for additional territory and extended authority.

Many of the Negroes migrated North, and they wrote back stories of the "new country" where "de white folks let you do jes as you please."

It has been from almost all Southern States to various parts of the North and especially to the largest cities.[20] What classes then have migrated?

Sixty-odd miles as migrates the sandhill crane, separated the settlements of Yankton and Sioux Falls.

But along the south bank parties of migrating Gentiles might also be met, and these sons of perdition were to be avoided at any cost"at least for the present," said Brigham, in tones of sage significance.

These foundations consist of artifacts, implements, customs, habit patterns and institutions produced and developed in numerous scattered localities by groups of food-gatherers, migrating herdsmen, cultivators, hand craftsmen and traders and eventually in urban communities built around centers of wealth and power: the cities which are the nuclei of every civilization.

The Italian invaders augmented and enriched the fare, without, perhaps, materially altering its character; and the first decided reformation in the mode of living here was doubtless achieved by the Saxon and Danish settlers; for those in the south, who had migrated hither from the Low Countries, ate little flesh, and indeed, as to certain animals, cherished, according to Caesar, religious scruples against it.

" She told him of a far-away land in the south, from which, when autumn comes, the birds migrate north to a warmer country hundreds of leagues away, and that birds of all kinds were now travelling north, and would be travelling through the sky above them for many days to come.

Eels migrate from the salt water of different sizes, but I believe never when they are above a foot longand the great mass of them are only from two and a half to four inches.

20 collocations for  migrated