recommit
— Verb
– English
~ commit again; "It was recommitted into her custody"
recommit
— Verb
– English
~ send back to a committee; "The bill was recommitted three times in the House"
recommit
— Verb
– English
~ commit once again, as of a crime
recompense
— Noun
– English
~ the act of compensating for service or loss or injury
recompense
— Noun
– English
~ payment or reward (as for service rendered)
recompense
— Verb
– English
~ make amends for; pay compensation for; "One can never fully repair the suffering and losses of the Jews in the Third Reich"; "She was compensated for the loss of her arm in the accident"
recompense
— Verb
– English
~ make payment to; compensate; "My efforts were not remunerated"
reconcilable
— Adjective
– English
~ capable of being reconciled; "her way of thinking is reconcilable with mine"
reconcile
— Verb
– English
~ make (one thing) compatible with (another); "The scientists had to accommodate the new results with the existing theories"
reconcile
— Verb
– English
~ accept as inevitable; "He resigned himself to his fate"
reconcile
— Verb
– English
~ bring into consonance or accord; "harmonize one's goals with one's abilities"
reconcile
— Verb
– English
~ come to terms; "After some discussion we finally made up"
reconciled
— Adjective
– English
~ made compatible or consistent
reconciler
— Noun
– English
~ someone who tries to bring peace
reconciliation
— Noun
– English
~ getting two things to correspond; "the reconciliation of his checkbook and the bank statement"
reconciliation
— Noun
– English
~ the reestablishing of cordial relations
reconciling
— Adjective
– English
~ tending to reconcile or accommodate; bringing into harmony
recondite
— Adjective
– English
~ difficult to penetrate; incomprehensible to one of ordinary understanding or knowledge; "the professor's lectures were so abstruse that students tended to avoid them"; "a deep metaphysical theory"; "some recondite problem in historiography"
reconditeness
— Noun
– English
~ wisdom that is recondite and abstruse and profound; "the anthropologist was impressed by the reconditeness of the native proverbs"