Definition of reaccept in English:
reaccept
verb riːəkˈsɛptˌrēakˈsept
[with object]Accept (someone or something) again.
you will be making a decision to reaccept your spouse
Example sentencesExamples
- But if she ever realizes her mistake and her loss, and comes back to me, I don't even know how I can reaccept her.
- However, with the Shavuot approaching, we have a chance to reaccept the Torah properly.
- The same thing can be learned by Purim, because on Purim the Jews reaccepted the Torah.
- It is also interesting to remember that slightly different standpoints are taken only after they were banned and reaccepted.
- Afghanistan has been reaccepted into the international community, where it is increasingly active.
Derivatives
noun
Zellweger remains to provide a lightness of tone, particularly in her grudging reacceptance of her father.
Example sentencesExamples
- There was a need ‘for the reacceptance of what may be described as an academic faith,’ James Thomson declared.
- Libya's complete renunciation of weapons of mass destruction and looming reacceptance by the US and Britain may be most important for the not-so-subtle message it sends to Iran and North Korea.
- The first Documenta exhibition signified Germany's reacceptance of avant-garde art, which had been banned by the Nazis as degenerate.
- In July of 1864, the Union Congress proposed the Wade-Davis Bill, which would have made reacceptance into the Union more difficult for the rebels who wished to set up provisional Union governments in occupied states.