Meaning Migration
What does Migration mean? Here you find 124 meanings of the word Migration. You can also add a definition of Migration yourself

1

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Movement of organisms in an intentional way between two points in space. Many migrations are seasonal.
Source: physicalgeography.net

2

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Relationships Narrower Term:  format migration media migration Related Term:  conversion reformat n. ~ The process of moving data from one information system or storage medium to another to ensure con [..]
Source: www2.archivists.org

3

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of hydrocarbons from their source into reservoir rocks. The movement of newly generated hydrocarbons out of their source rock is primary migration, also called expulsion. The further move [..]
Source: glossary.oilfield.slb.com

4

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The permanent relocation of people from one country to another. See emigration and immigration.
Source: www-personal.umich.edu

5

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Spreading or creeping of a constituent of a compound onto or into adjacent surfaces. See also bleeding.
Source: nachi.org

6

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of people across a specified boundary for the purpose of establishing a new or semipermanent residence. Divided into international migration (migration between countries) and internal migration (migration within a country).
Source: prb.org (offline)

7

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


1the movement of large numbers of people, birds, or animals from one place to another seasonal migration mass migrations the migration routes of birds2 the fact of changing from one computer system to [..]
Source: oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com

8

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


1610s, of persons, 1640s of animals, from Latin migrationem (nominative migratio) "a removal, change of abode, migration," noun of action from past participle stem of migrare "to move f [..]
Source: etymonline.com

9

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement from one part of the world to another. Emigration is the act of leaving a place, while immigration is the act of moving to a new country.
Source: moma.org

10

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


movement of a group of people or animals from one place to another.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

11

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Moving from one country, region, or place to settle in another. W.
Source: sciencemuseum.org.uk

12

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The relocation or movement of permanent residence from one place to another. This includes people who move from one city to another, one state to another, or one country to another. It also includes t [..]
Source: glossary.econguru.com

13

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


the movement of persons from one country or locality to another a group of people migrating together (especially in some given time period) (chemistry) the nonrandom movement of an atom or radical fro [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

14

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The process of moving a VM instance from one host to another.
Source: docs.openstack.org

15

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


movement of birds from one place to another according to seasons.
Source: eenglish.in

16

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


properly, any movement of a living organism across space, or between locations. In geography, most commonly applied to population movements. It can be used to describe daily and seasonal movements (e. [..]
Source: itseducation.asia

17

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Sustained directional movement by an animal that takes it out of one habitat and into another. Dingle 1996 1 Note: Biological definition.
Source: biodiversitya-z.org

18

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of people from one country or region to another in order to settle permanently.
Source: faculty.rsu.edu (offline)

19

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


vanderung
Source: yiddishdictionaryonline.com (offline)

20

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


A move from one hardware platform or software system to another, usually because the purchaser or lessee believes the new system to be superior. In libraries, the most common example is from the catal [..]
Source: abc-clio.com

21

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


migration of oil and natural gas from parent rocks – place of genesis, through permeable middles of the lithosphere up to favourable geological structures – reservoirs of petroleum and gas.
Source: ina.hr (offline)

22

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


When people move from one place to live in another place. This could mean moving within the same country or to another country.
Source: canadiangeographic.com

23

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Migration widely refers to the process of moving a computer system and/or its components from one operating environment to another operating environment. Migration also refers to moving data from one [..]
Source: dictionary.findlaw.com

24

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


A migration is a seasonal journey from one region to another. Many sharks migrate yearly from cold feeding waters to warm breeding waters.
Source: zoomdinosaurs.com (offline)

25

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


movement of people.
Source: geographyfieldwork.com

26

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Movement from one area to another
Source: myfwc.com

27

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


A seasonal move from one place to another place (sometimes from one climate to another climate).
Source: conservewildlifenj.org

28

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Spreading or creeping of a constituent of a compound onto/into adjacent surfaces. See bleeding.
Source: proofrock.com (offline)

29

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


(L: migrare= to move/travel) moving actively from one place to another by crawling, swimming, flying. The extent of the ocean horizontally is vast, and places which differ in temperature, are located [..]
Source: seafriends.org.nz

30

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


In population genetics, migration means the (permanent) movement of genes into or out of a population. Thus, a 'migrating' warbler does not cause any migration (in the genetic sense) by movi [..]
Source: uwyo.edu

31

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Movement from place to place. Here, it is used synonymously with gene flow
Source: evolution-textbook.org

32

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


the periodic movement of organisms seasonally from one location to another
Source: ontrack-media.net

33

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Spreading or creeping of a constituent of a compound onto/into adjacent surfaces. See bleeding.
Source: ltisg.com

34

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Movement of adhesive, ink, or colouring, from the side to which it has been applied through to the reverse side of a face material. A phenomenon controlled by application of a protective coating to the reverse side of the face material.
Source: hvggraphics.com.au (offline)

35

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The act of moving records from one system to another while maintaining their authenticity, integrity, reliability and usability. Migration involves a set of organised tasks designed to periodically transfer digital material from one hardware or software configuration to another, or from one generation of technology to another.
Source: naa.gov.au (offline)

36

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


 – The movement, over a long periods time, of an ingredient from one component to another when the two are in surface contact.  May occur between tape components or between a tape and the surface to w [..]
Source: budnick.com

37

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


the process of people changing their place of residence, either within or between countries 
Source: gcsegeography.co.uk (offline)

38

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of individuals or groups from one place to another. See also, immigration
Source: feedyourbrains.com

39

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Any peer-to-peer workload portability operation in which a physical or virtual workload is copied or moved into another physical or virtual infrastructure.
Source: netiq.com

40

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


instinctive seasonal movement of animals, usually to find food or to reproduce in a better environment.                           14 Milky Way
Source: alanpedia.com

41

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The moving of one species or a group of species from one area to another.
Source: enviroliteracy.org (offline)

42

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


moving a place to live to another place for a while seasonal moving for animals, birds or fishes to breed or find a new hanging field (computing) changing a platform from an environment to another one
Source: allwords.com

43

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The relatively permanent movement of people from one area to another.
Source: asanet.org

44

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Move seamlessly between Internet Service Providers (ISPs) using a MAC Code. This ensures minimal downtime as there is no cancellation period; you simply swap providers.
Source: zen.co.uk (offline)

45

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The process of transferring data between storage types, formats, or computer systems. Data migration is usually performed programmatically to achieve an automated migration, freeing up human resources from tedious tasks. It is required when organizations or individuals change computer systems or upgrade to new systems, or when systems merge (such a [..]
Source: aoknetworking.com (offline)

46

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Migration is the movement of person(s) from one country or locality to another.
Source: studyinaustralia.gov.au

47

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


(n) the movement of persons from one country or locality to another(n) a group of people migrating together (especially in some given time period)(n) (chemistry) the nonrandom movement of an atom or r [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

48

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


movement of a group of animals from one location to another
Source: dosits.org (offline)

49

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


a patterned movement of organisms that usually covers large relative distances. Ex.: Plankton can move up and down in the water column over the course of a day and whales can move around an ocean over [..]
Source: coml.org

50

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


(English) This term can be used to describe either 1) the movement of land such as occurs on some barrier islands as they rollover westward, or 2) the movement of species such as animals that travel from one location to another, seeking food or nesting habitat.
Source: teachoceanscience.net (offline)

51

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Many large marine animals (i.e., whales, predatory fish, turtles, etc.) Follow set routes when they migrate (for feeding, nesting, birthing, or breeding purposes) from one area to another. These routes are referred to as migration corridors.
Source: reefresilience.org (offline)

52

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The change of place, from one location to another, of a tissue, a part of a tissue, or symptoms. When we refer to a herniated disc, migration means that the disc material has moved out of its normal p [..]
Source: neurolaw.com

53

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


A means of overcoming technical obsolescence by transferring digital resources from one hardware/software generation to the next. The purpose of migration is to preserve the intellectual content of di [..]
Source: dcc.ac.uk

54

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


the movement of a group of people from one country or locality to another
Source: publications.newberry.org

55

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The stage in oil formation when the hydrocarbons are gradually expelled from the source rock and rise to the surface. Migration speed depends on the type of hydrocarbons and the properties of the rock [..]
Source: planete-energies.com

56

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The relocation of population from one region to another that, together with birth and death rates, are the determinants of population change.
Source: its.uci.edu

57

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


  Changing from one computer system to a different one, entailing changes in software and the transfer of data from the old system to the new, possibly necessitating conversion of data from the old format into another for use on the new system. For example: switching from an NCR-based system to an IBM constitutes a migration, while simply moving to [..]
Source: yourwindow.to (offline)

58

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Migration is the movement of an organism or species from one area to another (often a biotope) to seek food, shelter, changes in weather patterns or for reproduction
Source: noticenature.ie (offline)

59

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Periodic or seasonal movement of an individual or group from one habitat or location to another, typically of relatively long distance from one area to another.
Source: natureconservancy.ca

60

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


(1) The (usually intramolecular) transfer of an atom or group during the course of a molecular rearrangement
Source: chem.qmul.ac.uk (offline)

61

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Regular, periodic movements of animals in large numbers, usually away from and back to a place of origin. Many birds undertake seasonal migrations-typically in the spring and fall-to find more favorab [..]
Source: ec.gc.ca

62

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of chemical contaminants through soils or groundwater.
Source: dtsc.ca.gov (offline)

63

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Moving from one location to another.
Source: atsdr.cdc.gov

64

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of a contaminant in the environment through soil, groundwater, surface water, air, etc.
Source: legacy.azdeq.gov

65

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


is the regular movements of animals, often between breeding places and winter feeding grounds.
Source: edugreen.teri.res.in

66

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The process of moving across a boundary in order to take up permanent or semi-permanent residence. Migration is categorized into international migration (from one country to another) and domestic migr [..]
Source: fairus.org

67

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The Movement of Teeth into altered positions in relationship to the basal bone of the Alveolar Process and to adjoining and opposing Teeth as a result of loss of approximating or opposing Teeth, occlu [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

68

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The passage of other Cells across the layer of Endothelial Cells, i.e., the Endothelium. The passge may occur interCellularly via paraCellular Cell MIGRATION or intraCellularly via Transcellular Cell [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

69

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The passage of Cells across the layer of Epithelial Cells, i.e. the Epithelium.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

70

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Periodic Movements of Animals in response to seasonal changes or reproductive Instinct. Hormonal changes are the trigger in at least some Animals. Most migrations are made for reasons of climatic chan [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

71

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Migration of a Foreign Body from its original location to some other location in the body.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

72

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Periodic Movement of Human settlement from one geographical location to another.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

73

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The shifting in position or location of an Intrauterine Device from its original placement.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

74

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Migration is the movement of populations, groups or individuals. In genetic terms, migration enables gene flow: the movement of genes from one population into another. If the two populations originall [..]
Source: blackwellpublishing.com

75

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of an animal from one area to another. Some marine mammal species migrate from feeding grounds in colder water areas to breeding and calving grounds in areas of warmer water.
Source: marinemammal.uga.edu

76

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movements of genes caused by individuals moving, including new individuals entering (immigration) or leaving (emmigration) a population, introducing or removing genetic material and thereby changi [..]
Source: archaeologyinfo.com

77

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


A form of dispersal involving long-distance movements under at least partial control of the insects. Mimicry:
Source: ag.auburn.edu

78

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


 (noun) - the mass movement of an animal species across many miles in order to escape unfavorable conditions. Some butterflies, such as the monarch, may migrate thousands of miles in order to avoid wi [..]
Source: uky.edu

79

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The process whereby new neurons find their proper position in the brain.
Source: brainfacts.org

80

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


movement of an organism or group from one habitat or location to another, usually periodic or seasonal movement of relatively long distance.
Source: flightofthebutterflies.com (offline)

81

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The spontaneous dispersal of a species over long distances in order to seek suitable breeding sites, e.g. the Clouded Yellow migrates from North Africa, across Europe and northwards into Britain. Migr [..]
Source: learnaboutbutterflies.com

82

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


movement of a large group of one species of animal across many miles to avoid adverse conditions
Source: monarch.org.nz (offline)

83

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The seasonal movement of animals from one region to another.
Source: chesapeakebay.net

84

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of a cell over a surface.
Source: dddmag.com (offline)

85

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The moving of one species or a group of species from one area to another.
Source: amyhremleyfoundation.org (offline)

86

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Consolidating, upgrading or moving all users of a specific piece of software or hardware to another version, platform or environment.
Source: ecpmedia.com

87

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


 
Source: spcp.org (offline)

88

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Migration in the DDI context refers to moving from a DTD to XML Schema in terms of document structure; and from DDI 2 to DDI 3 as well as from DDI 3 back to DDI 2 in terms of porting content.
Source: ddialliance.org

89

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Preservation of digital content, where the underlying information is retained but older formats and internal structures are replaced by newer.
Source: cs.cornell.edu (offline)

90

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Movement of individuals between otherwise reproductively isolated populations.
Source: groups.molbiosci.northwestern.edu

91

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Gradual movement of moisture, usually on a horizontal plane, as it is absorbed by materials outward from its source or point of origin. cp ?wicking?
Source: bdma.org.uk

92

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The action of a pigment or dye moving through a dried film above or below it.
Source: rexart.com

93

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


the movement of oil, gas, contaminants, water, or other liquids through porous and permeable rock.
Source: edwardsaquifer.net

94

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Migration is the process of moving to another area, usually implying movement across an administrative boundary. The administrative unit left by the migrant is the place of origin or place of departur [..]
Source: population-europe.eu

95

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of people from one area to another. When the movement is between countries, it is called international migration; when it is within a country it is called internal migration.
Source: stats.govt.nz (offline)

96

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


– the movement of people across a specific boundary for the purpose of establishing a new or semi permanent residence. Two distinct types are international migration (migration between countries) and internal migration (migration within a country)
Source: nap.psa.gov.ph (offline)

97

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Used in theoretical population genetics as a synonym for gene flow among populations; in other contexts, refers to directed large-scale movements of organisms that do not necessarily result in gene flow.
Source: sites.sinauer.com (offline)

98

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Used both in the Census and in BC Stats population estimation and projection activities. In the Census, a person's address was asked one year and 5-years ago. A migrant was anyone with a change of address except for those whose move was within the same Census Subdivision. See The Census Dictionary
Source: bcstats.gov.bc.ca (offline)

99

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Movement of people from one geographic area to another.
Source: decisionanalyst.com

100

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Permanent change of residence from one geographical unit to another
Source: finance.alberta.ca (offline)

101

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


A change of a household's or person's residence from 5 years ago.
Source: ucsd.libguides.com

102

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


the process of relocating from one habitat to another in a regular cycle. migratory:
Source: audubonadventures.org

103

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Moving from one electronic system to another, usually in upgrading hardware or software without having to undergo a major conversion or reinputting of data. See also File conversion.
Source: sos.mo.gov (offline)

104

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


A means of overcoming technological obsolescence by transferring digital resources from one hardware/software generation to the next. The purpose of migration is to preserve the intellectual content of digital objects and to retain the ability for clients to retrieve, display, and otherwise use them in the face of constantly changing technology. Mi [..]
Source: handbook.dpconline.org (offline)

105

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The act of moving data or records in electronic form from one hardware or software system or configuration to another so that they may continue to be understandable and usable for as long as they are needed.
Source: sos.mt.gov (offline)

106

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The process of converting an email message or messages from one storage format to another storage format.  Migration can be completed using tools built into an MTA or UA, or by stand-alone migration t [..]
Source: e-records.chrisprom.com

107

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Moving files to another computer platform which may require changing their formats.
Source: mnhs.org

108

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of oil and gas through layers of rock deep in the earth.
Source: globaloilwatch.com (offline)

109

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of hydrocarbons upward from the source beds or source rocks where the oil and gas were formed. The gases and liquids percolate upward to permeable reservoir rocks where they are trapped by impermeable layers, a cap rock. There they remain until discovered by some intrepid wildcatter.
Source: sbcountyplanning.org (offline)

110

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of hydrocarbons within the porous and permeable reservoir rocks that results in the segregation of the oil and gas in different parts of the formation. Lighter hydrocarbon fractions (gas) break out or separate from the liquids (oil) to form gas caps or gas reservoirs. If the formation pressure is extremely high, the gas may not be able [..]
Source: sbcountyplanning.org (offline)

111

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of hydrocarbons from regions of higher to lower pressure.
Source: gas2grid.com (offline)

112

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


After generation, hydrocarbons are expelled from the source rock and pass through porous/permeable pathways and/or faults/fractures in the rocks towards the surface, and may encounter a trapped reserv [..]
Source: opog.com.br

113

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of fluids in reservoir rocks
Source: cgseurope.net

114

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


the movement of oil, gas, contaminants, water, or other liquids through porous and permeable rock. milligrams per liter - mg/L
Source: aquatechnologies.com (offline)

115

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


(1) The establishment of a plant species in a new area. (2) Movements particular animals carry out regularly, often between breeding places and winter feeding grounds.
Source: web.deu.edu.tr

116

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Long journey usually carried out by an animal at the end of a season.
Source: animalcorner.co.uk

117

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Moving an existing server and all its data to new hardware, while simultaneously upgrading the OS, is referred to as migration.
Source: glossary.westnetinc.com (offline)

118

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Conservation strategy that involves upgrading old equipment and materials to newer standards.
Source: virtualmuseum.ca

119

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of chemicals, bacteria, gases, etc. in flowing water or vapour in the subsurface. Also, a seismic/radar term whose general meaning is the correction of the recorded image for the effects of reflector dip. A very typical result of migration is the removal of hyperbolic events on the record resulting from diffractions from faults and oth [..]
Source: contaminatedsite.com (offline)

120

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of chemical contaminants through soils or groundwater.
Source: rrmsc.com

121

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


An instance of moving to live in another place for a while. Seasonal moving for animals, as birds or fishes, to breed or find a new home. *de|Vogelstrich|m,vo|bödatäv,vo|laudatäv computing: chang [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

122

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


Source: en.wiktionary.org

123

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


The movement of people or households from one location to another.
Source: forecast.id.com.au

124

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Migration


 The movement of people in or out of a region or country.
Source: rgs.org (offline)





<< Mid-Oceanic Ridge Milankovitch Theory >>

Dictionary.university is a dictionary written by people like you and me.
Please help and add a word. All sort of words are welcome!

Add meaning