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词汇 transmigrate
释义

Definition of transmigrate in English:

transmigrate

verb ˌtranzmʌɪˈɡreɪtˌtrɑːnsmʌɪˈɡreɪtˌtransmʌɪˈɡreɪtˌtrɑːnzmʌɪˈɡreɪt
[no object]
  • 1(of the soul) pass into a different body after death.

    (灵魂)转生,转世

    his spirit would transmigrate into another being
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Alternatively, Plato thought that all ideas were held from birth in the mind, where they had transmigrated from earlier souls.
    • The cycle, like the universe, is believed to have no beginning or end and individuals transmigrate from one existence to the next in accordance with their karma or moral conduct.
    • There are many European traditions, from Procopius onwards, which think of Britain as an island of the dead, a resting-place for transmigrating souls.
    • A distinctive belief is that souls transmigrate (are reincarnated) from generation to generation.
    • Buddhism held an alternative but no less unbelievable theology - that there was no such thing as a God, and that on death your soul transmigrates into the body of some new born creature.
  • 2rare Migrate.

    〈罕〉迁移,移居

    they might transmigrate to those settlements
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In other regions where the Javanese have been transmigrated, there have been similar outbreaks of violence, though not as serious.
    • Potential for interethnic conflict has increased over the past decades as more people from Java are transmigrated to outer islands, and more people from the outer islands move to Java.
    • A prerequisite for invasiveness is the ability of pneumococci to transmigrate and to disseminate through the epithelial and endothelial layers and to breach the blood-brain barrier.
    • Leukocytes may adhere, transmigrate, release proteases, cause additional endothelial injury, and lead to the development of inflammatory changes in the vessel wall.

Derivatives

  • transmigration

  • noun ˌtransmʌɪˈɡreɪʃ(ə)nˌtrɑːnzmʌɪˈɡreɪʃ(ə)nˌtranzmʌɪˈɡreɪʃ(ə)nˌtrɑːnsmʌɪˈɡreɪʃ(ə)n
    • The school of materialism called the Charvaka (also called Lokayat) did not believe in the cycle of rebirth and transmigration.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Karma regulates the reincarnation and transmigration of the soul, Sikhism links Karma with the doctrine of Grace.
      • Naturally, he regarded the pagan Platonists as mistaken in accepting polytheism, everlasting world-cycles, and the transmigration of souls.
      • Aren't you hinting at soul and its transmigration?
      • The ultimate result of this transmigration from one body to the next is that we have tied one more knot in the rope of attachment which binds us to this material world.
      • In other teachings the doctrine of transmigration went with an elaborate view of the spiritual cosmos within which transmigration occurs.
  • transmigrator

  • noun
    • Buddhas do not wash away ill deeds with water, nor remove transmigrators sufferings with their hands, nor transfer their realizations to others.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • On each of its four facades is the now famous and often parodied inscription a nation of poets, artists, heroes, saints, thinkers, scientists, navigators, and transmigrators.
      • At present the government has been providing rations to 27,000 Bengali - speaking families who live in cluster villages since 1978 when they were taken in the hills as transmigrators.
      • In Japan, Jizo is the much loved form of the Bodhisattva of the underworld; he is the emanation of compassion which guides and protects transmigrators into and out of life.
      • As he started in rearranging the foliage on the wreath he signaled the waiting transmigrator operator to telegraph the bottle back to The Ship.
  • transmigratory

  • adjective -ˈmʌɪɡrət(ə)ri
    • Its collage and essayistic structure enabled me to explore intricate, allusive ideas of postcolonial dislocation, cultural mistranslation and transmigratory spaces.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In accordance with them they become subject to joys and sorrows, which, in essence constitute what is termed ‘the river of transmigratory existence.’
      • It is the story of four people who live and die in succession, bearing the same birthmark and experiencing transmigratory dreams revealed to the lawyer-scholar Honda.
      • The researchers found that changes in the diet of a South Asian transmigratory population may be associated with an increase in incidence of childhood diabetes.

Origin

Late Middle English (as an adjective in the sense 'transferred'): from Latin transmigrat- 'removed from one place to another', from the verb transmigrare (see trans-, migrate).

Rhymes

abate, ablate, aerate, ait, await, backdate, bait, bate, berate, castrate, collate, conflate, crate, create, cremate, date, deflate, dictate, dilate, distraite, donate, downstate, eight, elate, equate, estate, fate, fête, fixate, freight, frustrate, gait, gate, gestate, gradate, grate, great, gyrate, hate, hydrate, inflate, innate, interrelate, interstate, irate, Kate, Kuwait, lactate, late, locate, lustrate, mandate, mate, migrate, misdate, misstate, mistranslate, mutate, narrate, negate, notate, orate, ornate, Pate, placate, plate, prate, prorate, prostrate, pulsate, pupate, quadrate, rate, rotate, sate, sedate, serrate, short weight, skate, slate, spate, spectate, spruit, stagnate, state, straight, strait, Tate, tête-à-tête, Thwaite, translate, translocate, truncate, underrate, understate, underweight, update, uprate, upstate, up-to-date, vacate, vibrate, wait, weight

Definition of transmigrate in US English:

transmigrate

verb
[no object]
  • 1(of the soul) pass into a different body after death.

    (灵魂)转生,转世

    his spirit would transmigrate into another being
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The cycle, like the universe, is believed to have no beginning or end and individuals transmigrate from one existence to the next in accordance with their karma or moral conduct.
    • Alternatively, Plato thought that all ideas were held from birth in the mind, where they had transmigrated from earlier souls.
    • Buddhism held an alternative but no less unbelievable theology - that there was no such thing as a God, and that on death your soul transmigrates into the body of some new born creature.
    • A distinctive belief is that souls transmigrate (are reincarnated) from generation to generation.
    • There are many European traditions, from Procopius onwards, which think of Britain as an island of the dead, a resting-place for transmigrating souls.
  • 2rare Migrate.

    〈罕〉迁移,移居

    they might transmigrate to those settlements
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In other regions where the Javanese have been transmigrated, there have been similar outbreaks of violence, though not as serious.
    • A prerequisite for invasiveness is the ability of pneumococci to transmigrate and to disseminate through the epithelial and endothelial layers and to breach the blood-brain barrier.
    • Leukocytes may adhere, transmigrate, release proteases, cause additional endothelial injury, and lead to the development of inflammatory changes in the vessel wall.
    • Potential for interethnic conflict has increased over the past decades as more people from Java are transmigrated to outer islands, and more people from the outer islands move to Java.

Origin

Late Middle English (as an adjective in the sense ‘transferred’): from Latin transmigrat- ‘removed from one place to another’, from the verb transmigrare (see trans-, migrate).

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