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1 The third, or " great emigration , " was under Winthrop, arriving in May, 1630.
2 A great emigration took place, no less than twelve thousand families fleeing to Rome alone.
3 No great emigration ever took place in our world without accomplishing one of God's great designs.
4 A great emigration necessarily implies unhappiness of some kind or other in the country that is deserted.
5 And it is certain that by nothing short of a great emigration could France have saved Canada.
6 One fine day in 1961 they boarded a ferry for the mainland, joining the great emigration from Sardinia.
7 She says my father is very indignant at the great emigration of the nobility that is going on.
8 In '43 came the first great emigration , when 1,000 people went to Oregon.
9 A great emigration of the Patriots took place; all were deprived of office, many exiled, and their property confiscated.
10 Then began that wonderful development, and the great emigration to California, by land and by sea, of 1849 and
11 From the great emigration of the higher classes of the nobility, the societies themselves were no longer what they had been.
12 Some boats on Lake Ontario, while the great emigration lasted, and there was less competition, yielded more than thirty per cent.
13 The next day I was on my way to St. Paul, as at that time there was a great emigration in that direction.
14 The boldness of young girls in England was explained to me, by the great emigration of young men-inother words, by the scarcity of husbands.
15 The great emigration of Jews to the United States, which had received its first impulse two or three years before, was already in full swing.
16 An old State, as we measure things out of New England, settled by New Englanders during the first great emigration after the War of 1812.
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This collocation consists of: Great emigration across language varieties