| 释义 | 
		Definition of migrancy in English: migrancynoun ˈmʌɪɡr(ə)nsi mass nounThe movement of people to a new area or country, typically in order to find work.  migrancy contributes to the rich tapestry of the cosmopolitan city  Example sentencesExamples -  Coles further suggests that migrancy and poverty, in addition to the physical squalor they often generate, are destructive to the personality.
 -  He said that the idea of us "pulling up the drawbridge" to stop the "hordes" of EU migrants is harmful, and could cause a backlash against migrancy within Europe.
 -  It is certainly true that mine-owners remained committed to migrancy.
 -  Migrancy and marginality are nowadays much more talked about in academic circles than by refugees tucked away in lorries and asylum seekers languishing in dilapidated inner-city housing estates.
 -  At the end, it's migrancy and a consistent pining for a lost home that accounts for their moments of highs and lows.
 -  Crammed with the detritus of migrancy - suitcases, chairs, blankets, kitchen utensils, a bicycle - it was a Leviathan memento mori to the hopes, fears and uncertainties of lives in transit.
 -  Quite often, and quite confusingly, it seems to be assumed that colonial rule necessarily involves large-scale migrancy and settlement of European populations in non-European regions.
 -  There are sections about poverty's effect on the epidemic, the influence of sex trafficking, migrancy and unemployment, and an in-depth look at globalisation and Third World debt.
 -  Many more, perhaps two to three million, did not receive land and lost their livelihoods in the cities and were forced into economic migrancy.
 -  Labour migrancy was seen not only as socially destructive of both rural and urban communities but as leading to high turnover, acute difficulties in training, and low productivity.
 
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