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sojourn
/ ˈsʌdʒ-; ˈsɒdʒɜːn /
noun
- a temporary stay
verb
- intr to stay or reside temporarily
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Derived Forms
- ˈsojourner, noun
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Other Words From
- sojourn·er noun
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Word History and Origins
Origin of sojourn1
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Word History and Origins
Origin of sojourn1
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Example Sentences
It is doubtless this sojourn that accounts for her ability to sing in French.
Thus the pope, who has insisted that his sojourn in the Holy Land is “purely a religious” visit, will confront a delicate dilemma.
That final jibe is a reference to Bennett's wife's success as a pastry chef during the couple's sojourn in New York a decade ago.
After just a year in India, her sojourn seems to have paid off handsomely.
The sojourn in Tel Aviv allowed Ajrami to understand Israel—something that he retained after he returned to Gaza.
At last he arrived at Dieppe, and, after a sojourn there, he put to sea upon the 26th of this same month of February.
However, a sojourn in a milder climate might prolong his life for a few months; so he advised Algeria.
I am truly sorry, Monsieur de Garnache, that our sojourn here is coming to an end.
What events for importance are comparable to the occurrences connected with his sojourn on earth?
That same autumn did the King lead his host to Throndhjem, bringing-to at Nidaros, and there making ready for a winter sojourn.
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