v
(obsolete, intransitive) To be healed, to be cured, to recover (from an illness).
n
The activity of restoring bushland to its original condition free of introduced species.
v
(chiefly sports, idiomatic) To experience a resurgence after one's productive years are assumed to have ended.
adj
recovering one's health and strength after a period of illness
adv
In the manner of a convalescent; with increasing strength or vigour.
v
(transitive) To make better from a disease, wound, etc.; to revive or cure.
v
(intransitive, video games) To heal one's character.
n
restoration after decay or dilapidation; renewal; repair
n
The act of repairing or recovering.
n
The process of overrestoring.
n
The reconstruction of physical and societal institutions after a conflict
n
(figuratively) Anything that is reborn after apparently being destroyed.
adj
That promotes recovery
adj
(religion) In favour of revival or revivalism.
n
(uncountable) The process of escalating again.
v
(uncommon) To reconstitute or reassemble that which has been dismembered.
n
The service of caring for a person after a period of disability or illness, helping them to recover.
n
The act of abolishing something again.
adj
Prone to, or having the effect of, causing a realignment.
n
A second or subsequent awakening.
adj
Revived or regenerated, especially emotionally or spiritually.
adj
Which has been rebuilt
n
(psychology, psychiatry) Chronic repetition of criminal or other antisocial behavior.
v
(transitive, archaic) To tame or domesticate a wild animal.
n
The act of reclaiming or the state of being reclaimed.
adj
Pertaining to reclamation or reclaiming of land (that was underwater or unusable).
n
(Christianity) The reconsecration of a desecrated church or other holy site.
adj
Which has been reconditioned
n
The act of reconsecrating; a second or subsequent consecration.
n
(of works of art) Conservation or repair subsequent to a previous attempt at conservation.
n
restoration, reconstruction
n
A thing that has been reconstructed or restored to an earlier state.
v
(intransitive) To convalesce; to recover health and strength.
adj
Restorable from sickness, faintness, danger, etc.
n
A return to normal health.
n
(archaic) recuperation; improvement in health
n
Gradual restoration to health.
n
Any remedy that aids recuperation.
adj
Of or relating to recuperation; tending to recovery.
v
(obsolete) To cure, heal.
adj
Restored to wholeness or a perfect state; renewed.
n
(rare) Restoration to a whole or sound state.
n
The act of redressing; redress.
n
(uncountable) The condition of being reestablished; restoration.
v
(economics) To restore the general level of prices to a previous or desirable level.
n
(obsolete, nonce word) The act of digging up again.
adj
Rebuilt or replenished with all new material; or, restored to original (or better) working order and appearance.
n
One who is spiritually reborn.
n
Rebuilding or restructuring; large scale repair or renewal.
n
One who, or that which, regenerates.
adj
That grew, was lost or destroyed, and regrew.
n
(informal) An institution for rehabilitation.
n
The process of rehabilitating somebody or something.
n
The condition of being reincorporated.
n
(obsolete) recrudescence
n
(uncountable) The act, process, or state of reinforcing or being reinforced.
n
The act or process of relitigating.
n
recreation; reconstruction
n
The act of returning; reabsorption.
adj
Having the property of having undergone remanufacture
n
A return to a spiritual way of life with respect for Mother Earth.
v
Alternative form of remeid [(Scotland, obsolete) To remedy, in its various senses.]
v
Alternative form of remeid [(Scotland, obsolete) To remedy, in its various senses.]
v
(transitive) To provide or serve as a remedy for.
n
(medicine) A temporary abatement, without actual cessation, of symptoms.
v
(British Columbia) To evict (a tenant) on the grounds that a large-scale renovation is planned.
n
The process of reobtaining.
adj
Of or pertaining to a reoccupation.
n
The result of repairing something.
n
(archaic) The act of renewing, restoring, etc., or the state of being renewed or repaired.
n
(rare) That which repairs.
n
A restoration of the phase of a system
n
The act of repopulating, especially with a species that might otherwise die out in an area.
n
the act, process or result of being reprieved
n
Restoration to an original state; renewal of purity.
n
(obsolete) rescue, deliverance
v
(transitive) To give a new signification to.
n
Obsolete form of restoration. [The process of bringing an object back to its original state; the process of restoring something.]
adj
(usually with "well") recovered
v
(Scientology) To "awaken" a previously lost or hidden memory (engram) from the past, in (a person).
n
A return or restoration to a previous condition or position.
adj
(sciences) Pertaining to or exhibiting restitution (return or restoration to a previous condition or position).
adj
Pertaining to or constituting restitution.
n
(informal) A restoration (of an old car or building, etc.).
n
The return of a former monarchy or monarch to power, usually after having been forced to step down.
n
Any movement or opinion that seeks to restore something to the way it was.
n
A supporter of restorationism, one who seeks to restore things to the way it was.
adj
Pertaining to something or someone renewed or rebuilt.
n
(archaic) A restorative medicine.
adj
Of or pertaining to resurrection.
n
The act of retaining or keeping; retention.
n
The act of growing well, or recovering from illness; the state of being revalescent.
adj
Beginning to grow well; recovering from illness.
v
To reevaluate the value of something.
n
The process of altering the relative value of a currency or other standard of exchange.
v
(UK, pensions) To apply revaluation to a pension benefit.
n
Metaphorical endeavouring to regain lost political or cultural territory.
n
A person or thing reborn.
n
(medicine, obsolete) A remedy which restores the natural order of the inverted irritative motions in the animal system.
n
(UK, law) revival of a suit which is abated by the death or marriage of any of the parties.
v
Alternative form of reinforce [(transitive) To strengthen, especially by addition or augmentation.]
v
To regain power after being colonized.
v
(rare) To reinstate (a law or institution which had been abolished).
adj
Promoted into a more productive or useful role.
Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook
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