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Definition of Reconcentrate
1. v. t. & i. To concentrate again; to concentrate thoroughly.
Definition of Reconcentrate
1. concentrate [v -TRATED, -TRATING, -TRATES] - See also: concentrate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Reconcentrate
Literary usage of Reconcentrate
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Confessions of an English Opium-eater: And Suspiria de Profundis by Thomas De Quincey (1850)
"... reconcentrate them into meditative habits, a necessity is felt by all observing
persons for sometimes retiring from crowds. No man ever will unfold the ..."
2. The Social Welfare Forum: Official Proceedings ... Annual Forum by National Conference on Social Welfare, American Social Science Association, Conference of Charities (U.S., Conference of Charities (U.S.), National Conference of Social Work (U.S. (1919)
"... of feeblemindedness until we reconcentrate ourselves anew to the individual
case studies and make them thorough and detailed and see where they lead us, ..."
3. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1919)
"... the blood-volume could not be maintained, and despite all methods of fluid
administration, the blood tended to reconcentrate the prognosis was bad. ..."
4. Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute by United States Naval Institute (1899)
"We had to reconcentrate at a given point all our forces, scattered along an
extensive line, and how could that be done without the enemy, whose lines were ..."
5. The Works of Hubert Howe Bancroft by Hubert Howe Bancroft (1887)
"... to reconcentrate in Granada."1 Masaya was occupied by the allies October 2d.
There was much division among them, owing to old rivalries, and the need of ..."
6. History of Art by Elie Faure (1921)
"... gone from him—that has gone out of the world—and TANAGRA (iv Century). (Museum
of Chantilly.) to reconcentrate, by artificial means, the dissociated 16 ..."
7. A History of European Thought in the Nineteenth Century by John Theodore Merz (1903)
"... the thermal motions would reconcentrate their energy and throw the mass up
the fall in drops, re-forming into a close column of ascending water. ..."
8. History of the World War by Frank Herbert Simonds (1917)
"... their extreme slowness of movement, had permitted Kluck to reconcentrate his
army, escape from the vicious position in which he stood when battle began, ..."