0 to move or move something or someone from one place to another: --
2 to move to a different place to work, or to be moved to a different place to work: --
relocate employees/staff/production It is rare to find agreed contractual terms that give employers unrestricted rights to relocate employees.
Most production has been relocated to Hungary, Tunisia, and China.
relocate (sb/sth) to/from/in somewhere The company is seeking to relocate to the Pier 98 Annex.
Many businesses in the region have closed or relocated abroad.
As shown by this analysis, contemporary constructions of 'retirees ' relocate an extensive array of problems and solutions from the societal to the individual level.
At the 7-year assessment, five families refused par ticipation, and the remainder could not be relocated.
The relocated group had more problems with mental and physical frailty, were more incontinent and suffered more speech impairments than the experimental group.
The bar will hence be able to relocate stars, and stars with low or high metallicity could be found far away from their original orbits.
With more than 50,000 persons being made homeless, the government decided in 1954 to relocate all squatters in multi-storey resettlement estates.
I used to have a friend in the hostel who was relocated to a nursing home because of her loss of independence.
In addition, any public debate of this kind was meaningless without relocating the meaning of community, self, and social interest within a new framework.
In anticipation of the flooding, communities were relocated and an enormous amount of research was undertaken to assess the potential and then the actual impact.