A bird of passage
A person who dosed not stay long in one place; a transient or migratory person; a person who changes location; a person who stays for only a short period of time in one place, job, etc.a transient or migratory person.
آلاخون والاخون (بالاخون) دربدر، خانه به دوش، آواره، سرگردان، خوش نشین، کسی که یکجا بند نمی شود، مثل یهودی سرگردان، کسی که زیاد یکجا نمی ماند، پرنده (مرغ) مهاجر یا موسمی، رهگذر.
He was a bird of a passage until he married and bought a house.
آلاخون والاخون بود تا اینکه عروسی کرد و خانه ای خرید.
More examples:
At present the organization has to rely on young, inexperienced graduates who are usually birds of passage.
She moves out nearly every year; she’s a true bird of passage.
War and Wildlife “The war is having a great influence on the birds throughout Europe, especially on the birds of passage.
Scientific AmericanSep 10, 2015
The days were often almost insufferably warm, and the birds of passage that crowded the hotels were beginning to take flight to more Northern latitudes.
Hocking, Silas K. (Silas Kitto)
Certainly it was his intention to become a bird of passage.
Bradlaugh, Charles
Birds of passage include the buzzard, kite, quail, wild fowl of various kinds, golden thrush, wagtail, linnet, finch and nightingale.
Various
For many years most of the early Daguerreotypists were birds of passage, frequently on the wing.
Werge, John
Most the birds of passage of were gone; no swallows were to be seen, and the wild pigeons passed by in large flocks.
Maximilian, Alexander Philipp
These facts are particularly illustrated with us by the very large element known as “birds of passage.”
Various
The fattening of ortolans, birds of passage which arrive lean in the country, is said to be so in some parts of France.
Garnier, Germain
It is, like the Fieldfare, a bird of passage, reaching us from the north about the same time with the Woodcock, in October.
Johns, Rev. C. A.
The Common Starling is a bird of passage, arriving in England about the beginning of March and leaving some time in October.
Various
Ducks, particularly teal, flew past us, and we observed, also, many other birds of passage on their flight.
Maximilian, Alexander Philipp
The tjäder, though not a bird of passage, is migratory, or rather wandering in domicile, and appears to undertake very purposeless and absurd journeys.
Marsh, George P.
The most interesting ones were the birds of passage: they had always something to tell.
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor
The length of time that birds of passage remain in Germany differs considerably with the different species.
Various
It is a bird of passage, visiting its customary breeding places in the summer and wintering in southern Europe.
Various
“We are birds of passage, and stop only as long as it pleases us.”
Crane, Laura Dent
As for the whites, they long remained mere birds of passage.
Stoddard, Lothrop
Guests began to come to the election, with the swallows and other birds of passage.
Sienkiewicz, Henryk
In every sense they are birds of passage: any ploughboy will tell you so.
Jefferies, Richard
This Spirit assumes as many shapes as Satan himself, and altogether appears to be a very curious bird of passage.
Holyoak, Austin
Are they more than “The sounds sent down at night By birds of passage in their flight”?
Holyoake, George Jacob
You can hear more Roof Light productions here and Birds of Passage are streaming six songs on their Facebook page.
The GuardianJul 19, 2011
The officials, on the other hand, were mere birds of passage, who took no real interest in the country.
Coleman, Ambrose
Certainly it was his intention to become a bird of passage.
Bradlaugh, Charles
You meet many English soldiers whose appearance is creditable to the country, and amongst the birds of passage are many Americans.
Ritchie, J. Ewing (James Ewing)
Badger, another bird of passage, became tax assessor.
Damer, Eyre
“No. I regret to say that I am not a native of these delightful environs,” said he, “I am a bird of passage.”
Watkins, Shirley
How could this mistress be expected to take any interest in or to consider herself responsible for the well-being of such birds of passage?
Hardy, Edward John
She asked the birds of passage if they had seen her prince, and sometimes they had news of him.
Brady, Loretta Ellen
But of late they seem to have earned the title, “birds of passage.”
Palmer, Mary E.
Bought an early Voisin which he named Bird of Passage.
Various
He looked at her thoughtfully as he repeated this definition of himself, evidently wondering how she liked “birds of passage.”
Watkins, Shirley
We are such birds of passage, my dear madam, that we can really never plan for the future.
Sudermann, Hermann
The birds of passage wakened from their sleep and sang their sweetest songs.
Brady, Loretta Ellen
Ten minutes might have passed, when two withered leaves fluttered over her head and sank like tired birds of passage swimming on to the water.
Sudermann, Hermann
Since the last bird of passage left us we had nowhere seen a single living creature, right up to February 28th.
Nansen, Fridtjof
The air was filled with the call of the birds of passage.
Marshall, Edison
But half, at least, of these dull people, he renumbered, were birds of passage only; to-morrow or the next day they would take the train.
Blackwood, Algernon
Many are rough country people who are evidently in Zaragoza as birds of passage.
Wood, Charles W. (William)
I soon saw that I should only be a bird of passage here.
Sue, Eugène
I praised the arrangement as just and excellent, but said that, being a bird of passage, I would prefer not to make it.
Arnim, Elizabeth von
In the spring of 1916 the legations and embassies at Washington had their birds of passage.
Buck, Charles Neville
For she, too, might be a bird of passage, leaving to-morrow or the next day, leaving that very night, perhaps.
Blackwood, Algernon
I live in the hotel; a bird of passage never has a comfortable nest.
Heyse, Paul
“Are you a resident here—or a bird of passage like ourselves?”
Thurston, Katherine Cecil
The English come as birds of passage, and depart when they have made their fortunes.
Froude, James Anthony
Will you go with us and become a bird of passage?
Andersen, H. C. (Hans Christian)
It was a ‘Bird of Passage‘ that spoke, impatient for the moment when the new-comer should pay his entrance fee.
Lever, Charles James
He went towards the nets that he had spread in the hope of snaring some bird of passage during the snow storm.
Sue, Eugène
Pressed forward, or solicited onward by the warmth, the birds of passage commence their annual migration, keeping pace with the developing vegetation beneath.
Draper, John William
What a change in this transient attitude might be made by a policy of having land available and usable for such birds of passage.
Speek, Peter A. (Peter Alexander)
And then I too, like a bird of passage that has alighted for a moment in some sheltered garden-ground, must needs go on my way.
Benson, Arthur Christopher
Most of the birds of passage had already taken their way south; we had met small flocks of them at sea.
Nansen, Fridtjof
Will you go with us, and become a bird of passage?
Baltzell, W. J. (Winton James)
The ruddy square of comfortable light —— him, as the beacon blaze —— The bird of passage.
Fernald, James Champlin
The bird of passage known to us as the cuckoo.
Bartlett, John