Apedia

Emigrate Means Immigrate Leaving Entering Prefix August Verb

Word emigrate
Date August 23, 2021
Type verb
Syllables EM-uh-grayt
Etymology Migrate, emigrate, and immigrate are all about being on the move. All those terms come from the Latin word migrare, which means "to move from one place to another." Emigrate and immigrate sound alike, and it is true that both involve leaving one location and entering another. The subtle difference between them lies in point of view: emigrate stresses leaving the original place, while immigrate focuses on entering the new one. You won't have trouble keeping them straight if you remember that the prefix e- means "away," as in eject, and the prefix im- or in- means "into," as in inject.
Examples "Originally from Jamaica, Martin emigrated to the UK in 2002 and enrolled in an IT course at a college in East London." — The Caribbean Today, July 2021
Definition Emigrate means "to leave a country or region in order to live somewhere else."
// The author's family emigrated from Hungary.

Tags: wordoftheday::verb

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card: Liminal barely meaning word zone describe june key

Previous card: Cryptic meaning kryptein secret baseball august adjective krip-tik

Up to card list: Word of the Day