0 past simple and past participle of reinstate
1 to give someone back their previous job or position, or to cause something to exist again:
Ordinance 9 of 1882 abolished the capitation tax and reinstated the export duty on plantation crops to finance the scheme.
Responding in the terminal links produces reinforcement, after which the initial links are reinstated.
As twentieth-century audiences have come to appreciate its narrative significance, however, it has been reinstated.
The problem was individual employers who unilaterally reinstated the benefits.
However, recall or recognition may succeed on a later test if the original emotion is reinstated.
At week 58 the original antibiotic policy was reinstated.
As a consequence, memory for properties or aspects of an experience may be lost from memory and later reinstated.
We are left wondering why they were they never reinstated in the 1950 or 1972 reprints.