- immigration; emigration
- immigrant; emigrant
noun (common) (futsuumeishi); noun or participle which takes the aux. verb suru; intransitive verb
noun (common) (futsuumeishi)
Wiktionary definitions (experimental)
Example sentences
20 results
Packed into wooden fishing boats like sardines, the immigrants undergo the dangerous voyage there.
The determining factor in question is whether this social welfare plan can facilitate the influx of immigrants.
They arrived in Southern Rhodesia, and there was a choice of an immigrants' camp, consisting of mud huts with a communal water supply, or a hotel; and they chose the hotel, being what are known as people of means.
When the early Protestant immigrants came to this country, they brought the idea that work was the way to God and heaven.
These days, when people emigrate, it is not so much in search of sunshine, or food, or even servants.
The United States has long been known as a "melting pot" because most of its people are descended from immigrants.
Between 1820 and 1973, the United States admitted more than 46 million immigrants.