Verb
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 pass periodically from one region or climate to another for feeding or breeding; -- said of certain birds, fishes, and quadrupeds.
Source: Webster's dictionaryThe wind makes you ache is some place that is deeper than your bones. It may be that it touches something old in the human soul, a chord of race memory that says Migrate or die - migrate or die. Stephen King
The Indians, however, could not migrate from one part of the United States to another; neither could they obtain employment as readily as white people, either upon or beyond the Indian reservations. Nelson A. Miles
I feel like everyone directs their own career according to their taste, what they migrate to emotionally and what kind of artists they want to work with. Kirsten Dunst
It may be that other developers are finding that their games play better on one platform over the other, so they're choosing to migrate to that platform. Sid Meier
I have a sweet tooth for reading, so books migrate to my zip code en mass. Dawn Olivieri
Hitler had this deal where he was supposed to make it rough on them so they would all get out and migrate to Israel because they needed people there to fight the Arabs. Hutton Gibson