No, "migrate" is not a preposition. It is a verb that means to move from one place to another, especially for seasonal reasons. Examples of prepositions include words like "in," "on," "to," and "between."
The suffix of the word "migrate" is "-ate".
The root word for the word "migrate" is "migrare," which comes from Latin meaning "to move from one place to another."
The word migrate has a long I, a long A, and a silent E.
The Future tense of migrate is "Will migrate", the word (will) or (shall) can be use when the sentence is future. EX: My parents (migrate) "will migrate" to Canada next year
Yes, the word "migrate" does have a prefix, which is "mi-" meaning "to move."
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The suffix of the word "migrate" is "-ate".
The Latin translation for the word migrate as a verb is migrare.
The root word for the word "migrate" is "migrare," which comes from Latin meaning "to move from one place to another."
The word migrate has a long I, a long A, and a silent E.
The Future tense of migrate is "Will migrate", the word (will) or (shall) can be use when the sentence is future. EX: My parents (migrate) "will migrate" to Canada next year
Yes, the word "migrate" does have a prefix, which is "mi-" meaning "to move."
Like if every one would move to anther location,orif it is only you it is migrate
The word "migrate" is a verb. It is used to describe the action of moving from one place to another, typically for seasonal or work purposes.
Immigrate is first attested in the 1620s, from Latin immigratum, past participle of imigrare "to remove, go into, move in," from in- "in" + migrare "to move"Immigrant, from -ant; 'one who shall'
I believe it is migrate.
They do not migrate in the strict sense of the word. They move between local districts in search of food and water