rehabilitate|rehabilitated|rehabilitates|rehabilitating in English
verb
[re·ha·bil·i·tate || ‚rɪːə'bɪlɪteɪt]
restore to good health or condition; clear a name, restore a person's good reputatio
Use "rehabilitate|rehabilitated|rehabilitates|rehabilitating" in a sentence
1. He was rehabilitated later.
2. Physiotherapy is part of rehabilitating accident victims.
3. It is usually worth rehabilitating drilled Boreholes, however, as …
4. Does prison help rehabilitate criminals?
5. Our disgraced teacher was publicly rehabilitated by school authorities.
6. There was no money to rehabilitate the tower.
7. Prison didn’t rehabilitate me or him.
8. “Prison Didn’t Rehabilitate Me.” —KEITH WOODS
9. I'm trying to help him rehabilitate
10. Both have allied themselves professionally, whereby Werners construction company is rehabilitated.
11. It is usually worth rehabilitating drilled Boreholes, however, as …
12. You can not rehabilitate a fire ant.
13. I met him at a shelter where Free the Slaves rehabilitates victims of slavery.
14. It aims to rehabilitate and develop natural forests.
15. He used exercise programmes to rehabilitate the patients.
16. During Nikita Khrushchev's de-Stalinisation, Yakir was rehabilitated on January 31, 1957.
17. Rehabilitating a pulled hamstring, Karros has yet to run in a game.
18. * 343,000 hectares of irrigation and drainage systems rehabilitated and modernized
19. Peng was rehabilitated near the end of the Cultural Revolution.
20. Yet the problems of rehabilitating the largely elderly resident hospital populations remained unsolved.
21. We will plan to rehabilitate the run - down neighborhood.
22. No additional load can be accommodated until the network is rehabilitated and reinforced
23. No additional load can be accommodated until the network is rehabilitated and reinforced.
24. 16 synonyms for Convalesce: recover, rest, rally, rehabilitate, recuperate, improve, come around
25. Jail is not a good place to rehabilitate delinquent youths.