reforest|reaforest|reaforests|reforested|reforesting|reforests in English
verb
[re·for·est || ‚rɪː'fɑrɪst ,-'fɔ- /-'fɒ-]
replant with trees, reestablish a forest
Use "reforest|reaforest|reaforests|reforested|reforesting|reforests" in a sentence
1. Other accessible mountain areas are being reforested, mainly with pines, mahoe and mahogany.
2. But the higher estimates require reforesting and Afforesting (converting into forests) productive crop and pasture lands as well as natural grasslands
3. Add to that the potential loss of coastal property from rising sea levels, crop loss from drastic weather related incidents, and the need to reforest large swaths of land to sequester CO
4. We are primarily planting Breadfruit trees because the sale of the fruit from these trees will permanently and directly benefit over 30,000 members of the impoverished indigenous Creole community by providing food security, permanent employment, while at the same time reforesting degraded ancestral land
5. (2) Forest cut or cleared below the required afforestation level shall be reforested or Afforested at a 2 to 1 ratio (2:1) and added to the amount of afforestation necessary to reach the minimum required afforestation level, as determined by the amount of forest existing before cutting or clearing began
6. The desire to reforest Israel became the work of both Afforestation, “the establishment of a forest or stand of trees in an area where there was no previous tree cover,” and reforestation, “the reestablishment of forest cover, either naturally (by natural seeding, coppice, or root suckers) or artificially (by direct seeding or planting) (“Afforestation”).