¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Nonmigrant
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Nonmigrant
Literary usage of Nonmigrant
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Effects of International Remittances on Poverty, Inequality, and by Richard H. Adams (1991)
"In round 2 of the 1986/87 survey, 150 of the original 1000 households were selected
for interviewing: 75 from the income-stratified group of nonmigrant ..."
2. Critical Perspectives on Racial and Ethnic Differences in Health in Late Life by Norman B. Anderson, Rodolfo A. Bulatao, Barney Cohen (2004)
"It follows that mortality rates in the migrant population will be lower than in
the nonmigrant population. The bias associated with health selection of ..."
3. Diabetes in America by Ronald Aubert (1996)
"Information is also available for several native nonmigrant Asian
populations (Japanese, Chinese, Asian Indian, Korean, and Filipino). ..."
4. Rural Substance Abuse: State of Knowledge & Issues edited by Elizabeth B. Robertson (1999)
"... drug consumption, and a somewhat smaller, but still substantial, scholarly
literature describes the lives of farmworkers, both migrant and nonmigrant. ..."
5. East-West Migration: The Alternatives by Richard Layard (1992)
"And if capital moves when the migrants move, the migration has little effect on
the average output of each nonmigrant worker in the East or West. ..."
6. Agricultural Trade and Poverty: Making Policy Analysis Count edited by Jonathan Brooks (2003)
"A clear example of this is the impact of migration on nonmigrant households in
rural Mexico. The conclusion that directly affected agents transmit the ..."
7. Sectoral Growth in Chile, 1962-82 by Juan Eduardo Coeymans, Yair Mundlak (1993)
"The estimate makes it possible to compute the differential productivity of "migrant"
as compared with the average labor productivity of "nonmigrant" in ..."
8. Library of Natural History by Richard Lydekker (1901)
"A nonmigrant, as a rule, and frequenting open rather than forest districts, the
magpie affords excellent sport before the hawk, Sebright stating that "it is ..."