0 to give someone back their previous job or position, or to cause something to exist again: --
1 to put someone back in a job or position previously held, or to put a law or rule back into effect: --
The hospital suspended Goldstein during the investigation but reinstated him when the report cleared him of any wrongdoing.
She will be reinstated to her full professorship and receive back pay and benefits.
2 to give back to someone a job or position that was previously taken from them: --
3 to bring back a rule, agreement, process, etc. that was previously stopped: --
4 to put back into a document something that was previously removed: --
Please reinstate the paragraph about compensation.
The work of the remainder of the chorale is to achieve harmonic stability and long-range closure by reinstating the functional bass.
If they do, then the actual infinite is reinstated in the realm of intentional objects.
A newly reinstated hierarchy replaced experimental theories of classroom participation.
We are left wondering why they were they never reinstated in the 1950 or 1972 reprints.
As a consequence, memory for properties or aspects of an experience may be lost from memory and later reinstated.
At week 58 the original antibiotic policy was reinstated.
Including the discipline of history in such exploration reinstates its foundational role within the field of music education.
They invoke and reinstate a familiar iconography of heroism and battle-sites, but do little to forge a fresh language of political conflict.