0 past simple and past participle of rehabilitate
1 to return someone to a good, healthy, or normal life or condition afterthey have been in prison, been very ill, etc.:
His reputation suffered after his death (his style did not develop during the last few decades of his life) and has still not been rehabilitated.
In most cases the front section of the house is rehabilitated, while the dwelling is restricted to the rear.
However, if mental capacity and information processing is the question, the time issue can be rehabilitated.
In all, 80 percent of the control group was rehabilitated in dedicated stroke units.
Temperance could be rehabilitated as a green virtue that emphasizes the importance of reducing consumption.
She is rehabilitated, but this is not something dignified.
In this issue we aim to show how the notion of transfer can be rehabilitated in research in language variation and change.
The scheme was rehabilitated from 1993 to 1995.