0 to join or be joined with something else again after becoming separated: --
1 to improve a relationship that has become less good or less close: --
2 to connect a piece of equipment with the power supply or a telephone service again after that connection has been broken: --
The telephone's cut off and there'll be a charge to reconnect.
You need to disconnect and reconnect the cables.
3 to use a computer, mobile phone, etc. to connect to the internet again after the connection has been broken: --
We reopened the applications and reconnected to the internet.
4 to connect again a person who is phoning someone to the person they want to speak to, after the connection has been broken: --
5 to create a relationship with someone again after a period of time: --
He made a compelling case for reconnecting the consumer with the producer and so shortening the food chain.
The strategy will help farmers to manage change and reconnect with their customers and the rest of the food chain.
He is right to point out that we are seeking ways in which to reconnect parliamentarians.
In particular, countries providing social benefits on an unlimited basis may blunt incentives for those out of work for more than a year to reconnect with the formal labour market.
When performing within the context of the music festival, participants use this aesthetic to create, and reconnect to, their sense of place and to others within the folk scene.
Later on, the asymmetric solutions reconnect again to build a new symmetric solution with its period doubled, and the process is repeated again and again until chaos is reached.
This article seeks to reconnect the discussions of the 1850s with the measure of 1867, and to explore some of the issues that shaped the course of legislation.
However, in mobile settings, where processes or agents can disconnect and reconnect at any time, this introduces peculiar problems related to the accesses to the tree.