migrate

listen to the pronunciation of migrate
الإنجليزية - التركية
göç etmek
göçmek
göç et

Kuşların neden göç ettiğini merak ediyorum. - I wonder why birds migrate.

Boş noktalar haritalardan kayboldu. Onlar tarih kitaplarına göç ettiler. - The blank spots have vanished from the maps. They have migrated to the history books.

göç

Kuğular buradan Florida'ya göç ederler. - The swans migrate from here to Florida.

Kuşların neden göç ettiğini merak ediyorum. - I wonder why birds migrate.

muhaceret
(Bilgisayar) geçir
göçücü
göçürmek
taşınmak
(Kimya) göç etme
(Tıp) migrat
(Tıp) Bir yerden diğer yere gitmek, bir yerden diğer yere geçmek, yer değiştirmek
geçirmek, geçmek
hicret
geçirmek
migration
göç

Hanson, uluslararası ekonomik gelişmelerin 17. yüzyılda büyük emek göçlerine yol açtığını söylediğinde hatalıdır. - Hanson is wrong when he states international economic developments led to great migrations of labour in the seventeenth century.

Afrika bir göç kıtasıdır. - Africa is a continent of migration.

migrate into
bir başka maddeye geçmek
migration
(Tıp) Bir yerden diğer yere gitme veya geçme, göç etme
migration
yer değiştirme
migration
(Tıp) yerdeğiştirim
migration
göçer
migration
geçiş
migration
migrasyon
migrated
göçtü
migrating
göçen
to migrate
göç etmek
file migrate
Dosya Taşıma
file migrate wizard
Dosya Taşıma Sihirbazı
migrating
(Tıp) Yer değiştiren, migren (göç eden)
migration
{i} hicret
migration
{i} göçme
migration
Taşıma
migration
{i} göçmenlik
migration
göçü
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
To induce customers to shift purchases from one set of a company's related products to another

We were hoping to migrate the customers of the C series to the E series and the E customers to the S series.

To change one's geographic pattern of habitation

Many groups had migrated to western Europe from the plains of eastern Europe.

: To move computer code or files from one computer or network to another
To move slowly towards, usually in groups
To change habitations across a border; to move from one country or political region to another
To relocate periodically from one region to another, usually according to the seasons
to remove or pass from one country, region, or habitat to another
{v} to change place, to remove
To move computer code or files from one computer or network to another
To move files from one volume to another within a file domain
(1) To move data from one storage pool to the storage pool specified as the next pool in the hierarchy The process is controlled by the high and low migration thresholds for the first storage pool See high migration threshold and low migration threshold
to move to another home When birds migrate, they fly away to live in another place that has more food and warmer weather
To travel at regular intervals in large numbers in a particular direction, typically north or south
{f} immigrate; wander; move from one region to another in a group; resettle seasonally
The process of upgrading an Oracle database from one major release to another
to move from one place to another, usually for food or to mate
(MY-grate) to move regularly from one place to another
To go on MIGRATION
move from one country or region to another and settle there; "Many Germans migrated to South America in the mid-19th century"; "This tribe transmigrated many times over the centuries"
To pass periodically from one region or climate to another for feeding or breeding; said of certain birds, fishes, and quadrupeds
To travel from one climatic region to another on a regular basis Many birds migrate to warmer climates in winter and return home in spring
- To move from one region, climate or environment to another
Relocate a server or group of servers from one LMID to another Migration must be planned for and specified in the configuration file
When birds, fish, or animals migrate, they move at a particular season from one part of the world or from one part of a country to another, usually in order to breed or to find new feeding grounds. Most birds have to fly long distances to migrate. a dam system that kills the fish as they migrate from streams to the ocean. + migration mi·gra·tion the migration of animals in the Serengeti
the movement of neurons to predetermined locations
To move data from one storage location to another See also client migration and server migration
In nature, the movement of a species, alone or as a group, from one part of the world to another
move periodically or seasonally; "birds migrate in the Winter"; "The worker migrate to where the crops need harvesting"
move periodically or seasonally; "birds migrate in the Winter"; "The worker migrate to where the crops need harvesting
To remove from one country or region to another, with a view to residence; to change one's place of residence; to remove; as, the Moors who migrated from Africa into Spain; to migrate to the West
To induce customers to shift purchases from one set of a companys related products to another
If people migrate, they move from one place to another, especially in order to find work or to live somewhere for a short time. People migrate to cities like Jakarta in search of work Farmers have learned that they have to migrate if they want to survive. + migration migrations mi·gra·tion the migration of Soviet Jews to Israel
migration
seasonal moving for animals, birds or fishes to breed or find a new home
migration
changing a platform from an environment to another one
migration
moving a place to live to another place for a while
migrator
A computer program that helps move objects between locations, e.g. from a legacy system to a new technology
migration
{n} the act of changing place, a removal
migrated
past of migrate
migrates
third-person singular of migrate
migrating
present participle of migrate
migration
To move from one region to another with the change in weather or during breeding season
migration
1 The periodic movement of animals from one location to another 2 The movement of large groups of ethnically similar peoples from one area to another
migration
The movement of chemicals through media This term is often used to describe the movement of acids between adjacent materials, such as storage papers and enclosed photographs
migration
The movements of genes caused by individuals moving, including new individuals entering (immigration) or leaving (emmigration) a population, introducing or removing genetic material and thereby changing allele frequencies
migration
The annual or regular movement of certain animals from one habitat to another
migration
The movement' over a long period of time' of an ingredient from one component to another when the two are in surface contact May occur between tape components or between a tape and the surface to which it is applied Some plastic films and foams contain plasticizers which are apt to migrate into the tape adhesive' causing the adhesive to soften
migration
A change from one hardware or software technology to another A database may be moved to a newer, faster server
migration
the act or process of people movement from one place to another with the intent of staying at the destination permanently or for a relatively long period of time
migration
a process applied to seismic data to put the reflections in their proper spatial position Since geophones and hydrophones are omni-directional devices, they cannot distinguish the direction from which a signal originates By convention, the geophysicist assumes that all the reflections received at a station originated directly beneath the station If the same subsurface feature creates a reflection that is seen at many stations, then a triangulation process can be used to "migrate" all the repeated observations of the same event to its proper location This process can be done either before or after the data are stacked (pre-stack or post-stack migration), and it can be done on the original time observations (time migration), or on data that has been converted to depth (depth migration)
migration
a group of people migrating together (especially in some given time period)
migration
the movement of persons from one country or locality to another the periodic passage of groups of animals (especially birds or fishes) from one region to another for feeding or breeding (chemistry) the nonrandom movement of an atom or radical from one place to another within a molecule a group of people migrating together (especially in some given time period)
migration
The movement of people across a specified boundary for the purpose of establishing a new or semipermanent residence Divided into international migration (migration between countries) and internal migration (migration within a country)
migration
the movement of animals in response to seasonal changes or changes in the food supply Examples of animals that migrate include ruby-throated hummingbirds, salmon, monarch butterflies, buffalo, and elephants
migration
the large-scale movement of a population for some specific purpose
migration
– the movement from one place to another (especially from one country to another) usually with intention to settle
migration
Movement from one place or country to settle in another
migration
{i} act or process of moving from one country to another, immigration; wandering; seasonal relocation of birds or other animals in groups; moving from one platform or operating system to another (Computers)
migration
Migration widely refers to the process of moving a computer system and/or its components from one operating environment to another operating environment Migration also refers to moving data from one storage medium or device to another
migration
Some distributed-parallel systems make it possible for their tasks to move, or migrate, from a node to another node while the tasks are running This is called `task migration' In such systems, tasks running on a heavily-loaded node may migrate to a lightly-loaded node to balance the loads across the system The `real' migration is very hard to implement on Windows or UNIX because their system call suites for communication are designed to keep on running on a single node throughout SSS-PC employs a virtualized communication mechanism of MBCF for interprocess communication to enable the `real' migration The `real' migration means that a migrated task can continue to run even after the original node is shut down SSS-PC is equipped with the `real' migration so that it is possible to increase or decrease nodes while applications are running
migration
Seasonal movement of animals such as birds from one region to another
migration
seasonal moving for animals, birds or fishes to breed or find a new hanging field
migration
the movement of persons from one country or locality to another
migration
movement, usually seasonal, from one region or climate to another for purposes of feeding or breeding
migration
The periodic movement of animals from one place to another, often between feeding and spawning areas
migration
A DIGITAL PRESERVATION STRATEGY which employs a set of organised tasks designed to achieve the periodic transfer of digital materials from one hardware/software configuration to another, or from one generation of computer technology to a subsequent generation The purpose of migration is to preserve the integrity of digital objects and to retain the ability for clients to retrieve, display, and otherwise use them in the face of constantly changing technology
migration
[n] the movement of people or other organisms from one area to another
migration
A means of overcoming technological obsolescence by transferring digital resources from one hardware/software generation to the next The purpose of migration is to preserve the intellectual content of digital objects and to retain the ability for clients to retrieve, display, and otherwise use them in the face of constantly changing technology Migration differs from the refreshing of storage media in that it is not always possible to make an exact digital copy or replicate original features and appearance and still maintain the compatibility of the resource with the new generation of technology
migration
Preserving the integrity of digital images by transferring them across hardware and software configurations and across subsequent generations of computer technology Migration includes refreshment (copying digital files from one media to another) as a means of preservation and access However, migration differs from refreshment in the sense that it is not always possible to make an exact copy of a database or even an image file as changes in hardware and software occur and still maintain compatibility with the new generation of technology
migration
the periodic passage of groups of animals (especially birds or fishes) from one region to another for feeding or breeding
migration
(chemistry) the nonrandom movement of an atom or radical from one place to another within a molecule
migration
act of moving from one region to another especially at regular seasonal intervals
migration
The act of migrating
migrations
plural of migration
migrator
an animal (especially birds and fish) that travels between different habitats at particular times of the year
migrator
{i} migrant, one who migrates; wanderer; bird or other animal that relocates seasonally
migrator
traveler who moves from one region or country to another
التركية - الإنجليزية

تعريف migrate في التركية الإنجليزية القاموس.

migrat
(Tıp) migrate
migrate
المفضلات