Definition of Reendowed

1. Verb. (past of reendow) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Reendowed

1. reendow [v] - See also: reendow

Lexicographical Neighbors of Reendowed

reencode
reencoded
reencodes
reencoding
reencounter
reencountered
reencountering
reencounters
reencourage
reencouraged
reencourages
reencouraging
reendothelialisation
reendothelialization
reendow
reendowed (current term)
reendowing
reendows
reenergize
reenergized
reenergizes
reenergizing
reenforce
reenforced
reenforcement
reenforcements
reenforces
reenforcing
reengage
reengaged

Literary usage of Reendowed

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Cambridge Modern History by Adolphus William Ward, George Walter Prothero (1907)
"... more gradual and in particular educational processes such as were set in motion by the Jesuit Order, whose collegium Germanicum at Rome he reendowed, ..."

2. The History of the Balkan Peninsula: From the Earliest Times to the Present Day by Ferdinand Schevill (1922)
"reendowed after the lapse of centuries with a national church, the Bulgars were jubilant over their victory, while the patriarch and the Greek nationalists ..."

3. Norman Institutions by Charles Homer Haskins (1918)
"Indeed, the fact that the abbey had just been restored and reendowed makes it probable that William was here extending to ..."

4. The Young Lady's Friend by John Farrar (1836)
"... thus admitting a larger quantity of air and freer circulation through them than before; and the blood thus renewed and reendowed with the principle of ..."

5. The Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture: A Discussion for the Amateur, and by Liberty Hyde Bailey (1916)
"So far as is known, this non-living residue can never be reendowed or activated with those characteristic properties of correlation and growth, ..."

6. The Young Lady's Friend by John Farrar (1837)
"... and the blood thus renewed and reendowed with the principle of life, imparts new vigor and fresh nutriment to all the organs of the body, and fits them ..."

7. Journal of Social Science by Franklin Benjamin Sanborn, Frederick Stanley Root, American Social Science Association, Isaac Franklin Russell (1886)
"... the political personality of the nation and by it is reendowed with that personality—his own little self rei'nforced by the aggregate of all the selves ..."

8. A History of England and Greater Britain by Arthur Lyon Cross (1914)
"From the sale of chapels, chantries, and other church property he endowed, or reendowed, upwards of thirty grammar schools. Christ's Hospital, founded for ..."

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