0 to build something again that has been damaged or destroyed: --
1 to build something again that has been damaged or destroyed: --
[ I ] The company is rebuilding under new management.
[ T ] The historic building was completely rebuilt after it had burned down.
2 to build something again after it has been destroyed or damaged: --
After the hurricane, the whole infrastructure of the city needed rebuilding.
3 to make big changes to a company, organization, or system that is no longer effective: --
4 to work hard in order to improve the way people think about you after a difficult period or a period in which you have made mistakes: --
rebuild your career/reputation/image I managed to rebuild my career by paying attention to human relationships.
rebuild confidence/trust/morale We must now begin the complex process of rebuilding trust among employees and their confidence in the organization.
Some big multinationals struggled to rebuild their credibility in the wake of the stock market crash.
Contrary to the normal situation of wandering farmsteads, the house was rebuilt on almost the same spot and with the same orientation, structure and dimensions.
The bridge was rebuilt in 18 months and has a design life of 120 years.
Their development agendas focused on rebuilding regional food production following the disruption of late nineteenth-century and colonization-related warfare.
In most of these works, the topological model is continually rebuilt from geometric data as the accuracy of the latter improves.
Finally, instead of directly rebuilding the node after each of the two recursive calls to ins, we call the function balance.
Chapter 7 does offer some specific suggestions for rebuilding the mid-level food system.
By calculating the resistance for the coil, the resonant circuit cooling power can be rebuilt based on the coil current.
Did it matter if this flagstone wall was original or rebuilt?