| 释义 | 
		Definition of seachanger in English: seachangernoun ˈsiːtʃeɪn(d)ʒə Australian informal A person who makes a dramatic change in their lifestyle, especially by moving from the city to a seaside or country area.  she's a seachanger from Melbourne who moved north to live on a commune  Example sentencesExamples -  It's a classic outer-urban, high-growth electorate, but it also has the characteristic Queensland demographics of sea changers, retirees, and farmers, to balance out this group.
 -  He says downshifting is not about the seachangers, because it does not include retirees or those who have been retrenched.
 -  I asked if the influx of seachangers may mask the poverty of long term residents.
 -  Outside the high income inner suburban electorates in which their main support lies, and a few sea-changer electorates outside the urban area, the party showed a pretty poor performance overall.
 -  This part of the country was transformed in the 1990s when it started to attract sea-changers.
 -  "Sea changers" aren't just going to the Australian coast in search of a better lifestyle; they're heading west.
 -  Jennifer is a seachanger who moved to the Northern Rivers to live on a commune and pursue her passion for filmmaking.
 -  The migration to the coast is being led by the baby boomers and other seachangers who are either retiring or deciding to adopt a more relaxed beach lifestyle.
 -  This sort of party could appeal to sea changers and people in the larger regional centres, as well as traditional rural voters.
 -  Many of the areas being targeted by sea changers do not have sufficient embedded infrastructure such as roads, water mains, sewerage and power, to cope with the growth in demand.
 
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