reclaim verb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes | Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries.com

Definition of reclaim verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

reclaim

verb
 
/rɪˈkleɪm/
 
/rɪˈkleɪm/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they reclaim
 
/rɪˈkleɪm/
 
/rɪˈkleɪm/
he / she / it reclaims
 
/rɪˈkleɪmz/
 
/rɪˈkleɪmz/
past simple reclaimed
 
/rɪˈkleɪmd/
 
/rɪˈkleɪmd/
past participle reclaimed
 
/rɪˈkleɪmd/
 
/rɪˈkleɪmd/
-ing form reclaiming
 
/rɪˈkleɪmɪŋ/
 
/rɪˈkleɪmɪŋ/
jump to other results
  1. to get something back or to ask to have it back after it has been lost, taken away, etc.
    • reclaim something You'll have to go to the police station to reclaim your wallet.
    • reclaim something from somebody/something The team reclaimed the title from their rivals.
    see also baggage reclaim
  2. reclaim something (from something) to make land that is naturally too wet or too dry suitable to be built on, farmed, etc.
    • The site for the airport will be reclaimed from the swamp.
    • reclaimed land
  3. [usually passive] reclaim something if a piece of land is reclaimed by desert, forest, etc., it turns back into desert, etc. after being used for farming or building
  4. reclaim something (from something) to obtain materials from waste products so that they can be used again
    • 80% of aluminium could be reclaimed.
    see also recycle
  5. reclaim somebody (from something) to rescue somebody from a bad or criminal way of life
  6. Word OriginMiddle English (used in falconry in the sense ‘recall’): from Old French reclamer, from Latin reclamare ‘cry out against’, from re- ‘back’ + clamare ‘to shout’.
See reclaim in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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wool
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