0 to repair (a building, a painting, a piece of furniture etc) so that it looks as it used to or ought to -- restaurere
The church is going to be restored.
2 to bring or give back -- genoprette; tilbagelevere
3 to bring or put (a person) back to a position, rank etc he once had -- genindsætte
Many colonial buildings survived decolonization and have now been restored.
However, employers and unions then reached agreements which topped up provision, restoring the previously-established levels of benefit ('gap insurance').
The process of collective learning described in the previous section restored the legitimacy of democratic institutions.
Once competitive electoral politics have been restored, a number of characteristics of the post transition political system are significant.
Convertibility was finally restored in 1867 (at 1864's actual prices) and lasted until 1876.
The republic was finally restored in 1867 and power was returned to congress.
The restoring force is much weaker in the latter case, so internal gravity waves move much more slowly than external gravity waves.
In restoring a place for the body and the species, biological approaches open avenues that have been closed to ethics, especially bioethics.
中文繁体
修復, 使重定, 使復職…
More中文简体
修复, 使复位, 使复职…
MoreEspañol
restaurar, recobrar, recuperar…
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restaurar…
More日本語
~を修復する, ~を復活させる, 取り戻す…
MoreTürk dili
eski yerine/durumuna/hâline vb. getirmek, onarmak, yenileştirmek…
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redonner, rétablir, remettre d’aplomb…
MoreCatalan
restaurar…
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