Advertisement
Advertisement
recapture
[ ree-kap-cher ]
verb (used with object)
- (of a government) to take by recapture.
- to recollect or reexperience (something past).
noun
- the recovery or retaking by capture.
- the taking by the government of a fixed part of all earnings in excess of a certain percentage of property value, as in the case of a railroad.
- International Law. the lawful reacquisition of a former possession.
- the state or fact of being recaptured.
recapture
/ 谤颈藧藞办忙辫迟蕛蓹 /
verb
- to capture or take again
- to recover, renew, or repeat (a lost or former ability, sensation, etc)
she soon recaptured her high spirits
- (of the government) to take lawfully (a proportion of the profits of a public-service undertaking)
noun
- the act of recapturing or fact of being recaptured
- the seizure by the government of a proportion of the profits of a public-service undertaking
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 谤别路肠补辫顎僼耻谤路补路产濒别 adjective
- 耻苍顎卹别路肠补辫顎僼耻谤别诲 adjective
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of recapture1
Example Sentences
They鈥檒l need to recapture their energy from Game 2 on light rest to avoid facing elimination in Game 5.
鈥淥bviously there is an inevitable hangover after a championship season. You find yourself trying to recapture the magic but the dynamic inevitably has changed,鈥 he said.
Doncic finished with 35 points, looking like a player who recaptured his mojo.
In his final season at UCLA, Andrews never recaptured the form he showed late in his sophomore season, when he averaged 17.1 points over his final 14 亚洲网紅露点 and played at an all-conference level.
The Sudanese army has told the BBC it has recaptured the airport in the capital, Khartoum, from the paramilitary RSF, marking its latest territorial gain in the brutal two-year civil war.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse