0 past simple and past participle of recondition
1 to repair a machine or piece of equipment and return it to a good condition:
The conceptual transformation of the ideas of 'nation ' and 'race ' by the years after 1800 reconditioned older prejudices of origin and religion.
It is most desirable that used herring nets should be reconditioned and mended to the greatest possible extent.
There are now 10,000 houses which have to be allocated as between actual slums and reconditioned premises.
I understand that the cobalt machine was a reconditioned unit and may therefore soon reach the end of its useful life.
Then gymnasia, and similar institutions, could make use of textile-free rubber grist—rubber which has been reconditioned and from which the textile element has been removed.
Pleas have been put forward for the reconditioned and tied cottage, and also for extending village communities and community life generally in rural districts.
The airport is at the moment being thoroughly reconditioned, overhauled, and extended.
Others are not new houses but existing houses, which have been reconditioned, requisitioned, repaired or readapted.