0 past simple and past participle of reaffirm
1 to give your support to a person, plan, idea, etc. for a second time; to state something as true again:
The government yesterday reaffirmed its commitment to the current peace process.
These events reaffirm my belief in the need for better information.
If such basic moral rights were also reaffirmed by law, cetaeceans would then receive sanctioned protection from hunting, captivity, wounding, habitat threats, or invasive experimentation.
An existing ideology is turned to individual advantage, and thus constraints on the group are reaffirmed.
The burden of prolonged musculoskeletal disorders to society was reaffirmed.
Characteristics of the plainsong may be reaffirmed, but can also be reinterpreted or rejected in the polyphony.
The second reaffirmed that employers have a part to play but admitted a need for 'greater protection for members of occupational schemes'.
The government's policy on cost recovery was reaffirmed.
This paper identifies two others: ' justifications', for behaviour that associated with weight gain, and ' repentance ', for behaviour that reaffirmed a commitment to losing weight.
Through market metaphors, poets largely reaffirmed the valuation of words as they were calibrated in a conventional tribal ideology.