verb |
1. |
regenerate - reestablish on a new, usually improved, basis or make new or like new; "We renewed our friendship after a hiatus of twenty years"; "They renewed their membership" |
|
|
renew |
|
|
re-create form anew in the imagination; recollect and re-form in the mind; "His mind re-creates the entire world"
|
|
|
replace substitute a person or thing for (another that is broken or inefficient or lost or no longer working or yielding what is expected); "He replaced the old razor blade"; "We need to replace the secretary that left a month ago"; "the insurance will replace the lost income"; "This antique vase can never be replaced"
|
|
|
refurbish,
freshen up,
renovate make brighter and prettier; "we refurbished the guest wing"; "My wife wants us to renovate"
|
|
|
revamp to patch up or renovate; repair or restore; "They revamped their old house before selling it"
|
|
|
remould,
retread,
remold give new treads to (a tire)
|
|
|
restitute,
renovate restore to a previous or better condition; "They renovated the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel"
|
|
|
freshen,
refresh become or make oneself fresh again; "She freshened up after the tennis game"
|
|
|
revitalise,
revitalize give new life or vigor to
|
|
|
rejuvenate,
restore,
regenerate become young again; "The old man rejuvenated when he became a grandfather"
|
|
|
modernise,
modernize,
overhaul become technologically advanced; "Many countries in Asia are now developing at a very fast pace"; "Viet Nam is modernizing rapidly"
|
|
|
reconstruct,
restore cause somebody to adapt or reform socially or politically
|
2. |
regenerate - return to life; get or give new life or energy; "The week at the spa restored me" |
|
|
restore,
rejuvenate |
|
|
renew,
regenerate restore strength; "This food revitalized the patient"
|
|
|
reincarnate,
renew cause to appear in a new form; "the old product was reincarnated to appeal to a younger market"
|
|
|
resurrect,
revive cause to become alive again; "raise from the dead"; "Slavery is already dead, and cannot be resurrected"; "Upraising ghosts"
|
3. |
regenerate - undergo regeneration |
|
|
change undergo a change; become different in essence; losing one's or its original nature; "She changed completely as she grew older"; "The weather changed last night"
|
|
|
rejuvenate become young again; "The old man rejuvenated when he became a grandfather"
|
4. |
regenerate - restore strength; "This food revitalized the patient" |
|
|
revitalize |
|
|
ameliorate,
improve,
meliorate,
amend,
better make amendments to; "amend the document"
|
|
|
rejuvenate become young again; "The old man rejuvenated when he became a grandfather"
|
5. |
regenerate - be formed or shaped anew |
|
|
take form,
take shape,
spring,
form develop suddenly; "The tire sprang a leak"
|
6. |
regenerate - replace (tissue or a body part) through the formation of new tissue; "The snake regenerated its tail" |
|
|
re-create form anew in the imagination; recollect and re-form in the mind; "His mind re-creates the entire world"
|
7. |
regenerate - amplify (an electron current) by causing part of the power in the output circuit to act upon the input circuit |
|
|
increase make bigger or more; "The boss finally increased her salary"; "The university increased the number of students it admitted"
|
8. |
regenerate - form or produce anew; "regenerate hatred" |
|
|
create,
make create by artistic means; "create a poem"; "Schoenberg created twelve-tone music"; "Picasso created Cubism"; "Auden made verses"
|
adjektiv |
1. |
regenerate - reformed spiritually or morally; "a regenerate sinner"; "regenerate by redemption from error or decay" |
|
|
unregenerated,
unregenerate not reformed morally or spiritually; "unregenerate human nature"; "unregenerate conservatism"
|
|
|
saved rescued; especially from the power and consequences of sin; "a saved soul"
|
|
|
born-again,
converted,
reborn spiritually reborn or converted; "a born-again Christian"
|
|
|
reformed of or relating to the body of Protestant Christianity arising during the Reformation; used of some Protestant churches especially Calvinist as distinct from Lutheran; "Dutch Reformed theology"
|