rehabilitate

verb
🔊/ˌriːəˈbɪlɪteɪt/
🔊/ˌriːəˈbɪlɪteɪt/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they rehabilitate
🔊/ˌriːəˈbɪlɪteɪt/
🔊/ˌriːəˈbɪlɪteɪt/
he / she / it rehabilitates
🔊/ˌriːəˈbɪlɪteɪts/
🔊/ˌriːəˈbɪlɪteɪts/
past simple rehabilitated
🔊/ˌriːəˈbɪlɪteɪtɪd/
🔊/ˌriːəˈbɪlɪteɪtɪd/
past participle rehabilitated
🔊/ˌriːəˈbɪlɪteɪtɪd/
🔊/ˌriːəˈbɪlɪteɪtɪd/
-ing form rehabilitating
🔊/ˌriːəˈbɪlɪteɪtɪŋ/
🔊/ˌriːəˈbɪlɪteɪtɪŋ/
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  1. rehabilitate somebody to help somebody to have a normal, useful life again after they have been very ill or in prison for a long time使(重病患者)康复;使(长期服刑者)恢复正常生活
    • a unit for rehabilitating drug addicts帮助吸毒者恢复正常生活的机构
    • The new proposals involve rehabilitating even more patients for life outside hospital.新的建议包括使更多的病人在医院外恢复生活。
    Topics Illnessc2
  2. rehabilitate somebody (as something) to begin to consider that somebody is good or acceptable after a long period during which they were considered bad or unacceptable恢复…的名誉;给…平反昭雪
    • He played a major role in rehabilitating Magritte as an artist.他对恢复玛格里特艺术家的名誉起了重要的作用。🔊🔊
  3. rehabilitate something to return a building or an area to its previous good condition使(建筑物或地区)恢复原状;修复
    • Billions of pounds are being spent on rehabilitating inner-city areas.数十亿英镑用于重建市区。
  4. Word Originlate 16th cent. (earlier (late 15th cent.) as rehabilitation) (in the sense ‘restore to former privileges’): from medieval Latin rehabilitat-, from the verb rehabilitare (from re- and habilitate, from medieval Latin habilitat- ‘made able’, from the verb habilitare, from habilitas, from habilis ‘able’).