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Перевод: relocate speek relocate


[глагол]
перемещать; переселять; передислоцировать; перебазировать; перебазироваться


Тезаурус:

  1. Plans to develop the market have so far required 100 businesses to relocate and changed the lives of an infinite number of people.
  2. Willingness to relocate within the UK also varies by region.
  3. This is usually a result of family and marriage ties and so an employer might expect young unattached female staff to be more willing to relocate than married women.
  4. Relocate it to the UK, give, say, Craig Charles his head, change Cali to Scally - and you'd be left with dead air.
  5. At meetings of the European Parliament's Human Rights Committee (at which even the French Communists stayed silent), Newens compared Ceauescu's plan to demolish half the villages in Romania and to relocate millions of people into standardized concrete blocks with the effects of redevelopment around Kings Cross on his own constituents.
  6. Just as the inhabitants of the barrios here defend their pathetic shanties to the last, defying the well-meaning efforts of the authorities to relocate them, so the poor in intellect cling to whatever feeble idea they have been able to fashion out of the odds and ends they have foraged.
  7. If the European Convention on Human Rights is incorporated into our law, political power will relocate itself in the Royal Courts of Justice, and advocates will be deciding the law on abortion, on Sunday trading, on political and tobacco advertising, and the like.
  8. One of the problems, he said, was that staff were resisting a plan to relocate them from local offices, where they were in touch with industry, to remote district offices.
  9. If a minimum wage were introduced, Dewhirst would relocate much of its manufacturing to the Far East at the cost of thousands of British jobs, he said, adding that at least a quarter of the jobs in the industry would be lost.
  10. They too failed to make any significant impact, and many struggling churches have either been forced to close or to relocate in the suburbs following the migration pattern of their members.
  11. Although the Sandinistas have repeatedly pledged democratic elections in February, Mr Arias was said to be fearful that a failure to disarm, relocate or disband the contras could provoke a Sandinista cross-border sweep against the rebels and cancellation of the polls.
  12. He opened his shop in Nurenburg selling radios and producing transformers in 1930, and in 1945 he was allowed by the Allies to relocate his business in Furth, where it was one of the first to produce FM radios, then television sets - and high fidelity reel-to-reel tape recorders which serious musicians felt obliged to pay serious money for.
  13. This is principally because the mouse can roll in four directions to replicate the equivalent +, -, * and / keyboard commands to zoom and relocate the graphics.

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