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: --
These events reaffirm my belief in the need for better information.
The government yesterday reaffirmed its commitment to the current peace process.
Common law principles were newly justified with a marital unity argument that reaffirmed and modernized the common law for the twentieth century.
Then, in another somewhat bewildering response, he reaffirmed his party allegiance.
This care would then in turn have reaffirmed the status of jurors as social elites.
To the very end, representation and presentation are intertwined, contrasted, and resolved, their difference and interdependence reaffirmed.
On the other hand an official church report, as late as 1957, reaffirmed the martyred monarch's status as a saint by popular canonisation.
Instead, he sought to synthesize them with his reaffirmed faith and create a hybrid form that would be neither scripturalist and conservative nor radically modernist.
They reaffirmed the local community's duty to assist the elderly poor, but at the same time they reinforced filial obligations to the aged.
Through market metaphors, poets largely reaffirmed the valuation of words as they were calibrated in a conventional tribal ideology.