| left | | |
| n. (location) | 1. left | location near or direction toward the left side; i.e. the side to the north when a person or object faces east.; "she stood on the left" |
| ~ position, place | the particular portion of space occupied by something.; "he put the lamp back in its place" |
| ~ left stage, stage left | the part of the stage on the actor's left as the actor faces the audience. |
| n. (group) | 2. left, left wing | those who support varying degrees of social or political or economic change designed to promote the public welfare. |
| ~ faction, sect | a dissenting clique. |
| n. (body) | 3. left, left hand | the hand that is on the left side of the body.; "jab with your left" |
| ~ hand, manus, mitt, paw | the (prehensile) extremity of the superior limb.; "he had the hands of a surgeon"; "he extended his mitt" |
| n. (artifact) | 4. left, left field, leftfield | the piece of ground in the outfield on the catcher's left.; "the batter flied out to left" |
| ~ outfield | the area of a baseball playing field beyond the lines connecting the bases. |
| ~ parcel of land, piece of ground, piece of land, tract, parcel | an extended area of land. |
| n. (act) | 5. left | a turn toward the side of the body that is on the north when the person is facing east.; "take a left at the corner" |
| ~ turning, turn | the act of changing or reversing the direction of the course.; "he took a turn to the right" |
| adj. | 6. left | being or located on or directed toward the side of the body to the west when facing north.; "my left hand"; "left center field"; "the left bank of a river is bank on your left side when you are facing downstream" |
| ~ left-handed | using or intended for the left hand.; "left-handed golfers need left-handed clubs"; "left-handed scissors" |
| ~ left-hand | located on or directed toward the left.; "a car with left-hand drive" |
| ~ leftmost | farthest to the left.; "the leftmost non-zero digit" |
| ~ near, nigh | being on the left side.; "the near or nigh horse is the one on the left"; "the animal's left side is its near or nigh side" |
| ~ larboard, port | located on the left side of a ship or aircraft. |
| adj. | 7. left, left over, leftover, odd, remaining, unexpended | not used up.; "leftover meatloaf"; "she had a little money left over so she went to a movie"; "some odd dollars left"; "saved the remaining sandwiches for supper"; "unexpended provisions" |
| ~ unexhausted | not used up completely.; "an unexhausted well" |
| adj. | 8. left, left-hand | intended for the left hand.; "I rarely lose a left-hand glove" |
| ~ left-handed | using or intended for the left hand.; "left-handed golfers need left-handed clubs"; "left-handed scissors" |
| adj. | 9. left | of or belonging to the political or intellectual left. |
| ~ socialist, socialistic | advocating or following the socialist principles.; "socialistic government" |
| ~ liberal | tolerant of change; not bound by authoritarianism, orthodoxy, or tradition. |
| ~ far left | radical or extremely liberal. |
| ~ leftish | tending toward the political left. |
| ~ left-of-center, left-wing, leftist | believing in or supporting tenets of the political left. |
| ~ liberal | having political or social views favoring reform and progress. |
| adv. | 10. left | toward or on the left; also used figuratively.; "he looked right and left"; "the political party has moved left" |
| migrate | | |
| v. (motion) | 1. migrate, transmigrate | move from one country or region to another and settle there.; "Many Germans migrated to South America in the mid-19th century"; "This tribe transmigrated many times over the centuries" |
| ~ immigrate | come into a new country and change residency.; "Many people immigrated at the beginning of the 20th century" |
| ~ immigrate | migrate to a new environment.; "only few plants can immigrate to the island" |
| ~ emigrate | leave one's country of residence for a new one.; "Many people had to emigrate during the Nazi period" |
| ~ move | change residence, affiliation, or place of employment.; "We moved from Idaho to Nebraska"; "The basketball player moved from one team to another" |
| ~ migrate | move periodically or seasonally.; "birds migrate in the Winter"; "The workers migrate to where the crops need harvesting" |
| v. (motion) | 2. migrate | move periodically or seasonally.; "birds migrate in the Winter"; "The workers migrate to where the crops need harvesting" |
| ~ move | change residence, affiliation, or place of employment.; "We moved from Idaho to Nebraska"; "The basketball player moved from one team to another" |
| ~ migrate, transmigrate | move from one country or region to another and settle there.; "Many Germans migrated to South America in the mid-19th century"; "This tribe transmigrated many times over the centuries" |
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