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Word Meanings - REJUVENATE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

To render young again.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of REJUVENATE)

Related words: (words related to REJUVENATE)

  • REFORMALIZE
    To affect reformation; to pretend to correctness.
  • REFORMATIVE
    Forming again; having the quality of renewing form; reformatory. Good.
  • REPEATEDLY
    More than once; again and again; indefinitely.
  • RENOVATE
    To make over again; to restore to freshness or vigor; to renew. All nature feels the reniovating force Of winter. Thomson. (more info) renovare;pref. re- re- + novare to make new, fr. novus new. See New,
  • REITERATE
    To repeat again and again; to say or do repeatedly; sometimes, to repeat. That with reiterated crimes he might Heap on himself damnation. Milton. You never spoke what did become you less Than this; which to reiterate were sin. Shak. Syn.
  • REPEATER
    One who, or that which, repeats. Specifically: A watch with a striking apparatus which, upon pressure of a spring, will indicate the time, usually in hours and quarters. A repeating firearm. An instrument for resending a telegraphic message
  • REFRESHMENT
    1. The act of refreshing, or the state of being refreshed; restoration of strength, spirit, vigor, or liveliness; relief after suffering; new life or animation after depression. 2. That which refreshes; means of restoration or reanimation;
  • TRANSFORMATION
    The act of transforming, or the state of being transformed; change of form or condition. Specifically: --
  • RESTORE
    To bring back to its former state; to bring back from a state of ruin, decay, disease, or the like; to repair; to renew; to recover. "To restore and to build Jerusalem." Dan. ix. 25. Our fortune restored after the severest afflictions. Prior. And
  • REPEAT
    To repay or refund . To repeat one's self, to do or say what one has already done or said. -- To repeat signals, to make the same signals again; specifically, to communicate, by repeating them, the signals shown at headquarters. Syn.
  • TRANSFORM
    To be changed in form; to be metamorphosed. His hair transforms to down. Addison.
  • REJUVENATED
    1. Rendered young again; as, rejuvenated life. Stimulated by uplift to renewed erosive activity; -- said of streams. Developed with steep slopes inside a district previously worn down nearly to base level; -- said of topography, or features of
  • TRANSFORMISM
    The hypothesis, or doctrine, that living beings have originated by the modification of some other previously existing forms of living matter; -- opposed to abiogenesis. Huxley.
  • REFORMATORY
    An institution for promoting the reformation of offenders. Magistrates may send juvenile offenders to reformatories instead of to prisons. Eng. Cyc.
  • RENEW
    To become new, or as new; to grow or begin again.
  • REFORMIST
    A reformer.
  • REFORMABLE
    Capable of being reformed. Foxe.
  • REFORMLY
    In the manner of a reform; for the purpose of reform. Milton.
  • REFORMED
    Retained in service on half or full pay after the disbandment of the company or troop; -- said of an officer. (more info) 1. Corrected; amended; restored to purity or excellence; said, specifically, of the whole body of Protestant churches
  • FURBISH
    To rub or scour to brightness; to clean; to burnish; as, to furbish a sword or spear. Shak. Furbish new the name of John a Gaunt. Shak.
  • PREFORM
    To form beforehand, or for special ends. "Their natures and preformed faculties. " Shak.
  • REISSUE
    To issue a second time.
  • PREFORMATIVE
    A formative letter at the beginning of a word. M. Stuart.
  • RE-REITERATE
    To reiterate many times. "My re-reiterated wish." Tennyson.
  • PREFORMATION
    An old theory of the preƫxistence of germs. Cf. EmboƮtement.

 

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