transmigratory
English
    
    Adjective
    
transmigratory (not comparable)
- Of, pertaining to, or undergoing transmigration, as a soul from one body to another.
- 1850, Ralph Waldo Emerson, “Chapter 4 - Swedenborg; or, the Mystic”, in Representative Men:- I think of him as of some transmigratory votary of Indian legend, who says, "Though I be dog, or jackal, or pismire, in the last rudiments of nature, under what integument or ferocity, I cleave to right, as the sure ladder that leads up to man and to God."
 
- 1866 March 1, B. W. Ball, “A Ramble through the Market”, in The Atlantic, retrieved 30 September 2010:- To the Brahmin, the lower animal kingdom is a vast masquerade of transmigratory souls.
 
- 1901 [1887], Robert Louis Stevenson, chapter 6, in Memoir of Fleeming Jenkin, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons:- [W]e probably called others bad only so far as we were wrapped in ourselves and lacking in the transmigratory forces of imagination.
 
 
- Of, pertaining to, or undergoing transmigration, as between places.
- 1998 October 14, Geraldine Albela, “Two-phase tourism promotion in Perak”, in New Straits Times, retrieved 30 September 2010, page 16:- [T]he Kuala Gula Bird Sanctuary offers a hideaway to see some of the transmigratory birds that regular flock to the area.
 
- 2008, R. Balakrishnan et al., “Trends in Overweight and Obesity Among 5 - 7-year-old White and South Asian Children Born Between 1991 and 1999”, in Journal of Public Health, volume 30, number 2:- Changes in the diet of a South Asian transmigratory population may be associated with an increase in incidence of childhood diabetes.
 
 
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