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单词 reoccupy
释义

Definition of reoccupy in English:

reoccupy

verbreoccupying, reoccupied, reoccupies riːˈɒkjʊpʌɪˌriˈɑkjəˌpaɪ
[with object]
  • Occupy (a place or position) again.

    再占有(地方或职位)

    the English reoccupied the border counties

    英格兰人重新占领了边境地区各郡。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • She warned of divine punishment if the capital were not reoccupied.
    • When the Red Army reoccupied these areas whole nations, including party members, were deported and accused of collaboration.
    • Little is known about the Iron Age occupation, but the site was certainly reoccupied in the late C3 and C4 AD, and in Saxon times a cemetery was established within the ramparts.
    • They reoccupied our towns, villages and refugee camps, destroyed our security infrastructure, destroyed our police station, and they said we're doing this to stop these suicide bombings.
    • By the end of September 1896, he had reoccupied the northernmost province of Dongola, roughly halfway to Khartoum.
    • The isolation of the pub from the rest of its property means that it was unlikely ever to be reoccupied for college purposes.
    • France, however, hoped to reassert control over Indo-China and reoccupied the main cities.
    • When the French launched a campaign to reoccupy the region, a ruthless war ensued.
    • One contingent of British troops reached the oilfields of Baku, which it occupied until September, when the Turks reoccupied the area.
    • When these estates were reoccupied at the end of the century it was as abandoned land given over to settlers imported by government.
    • The Allies would keep their military forces on the Rhine to enforce payment and have the right to reoccupy German territory in the event of default.
    • In response, Paraguayan forces reoccupied the site.
    • When Germany reoccupied the Rhineland in March 1936, the French government initially made belligerent noises, but once it became clear that Britain would not provide support, the French quietly acquiesced.
    • But the Israeli government should ask itself about what they are doing today, and their decision to reoccupy our cities.
    • Well, the decision of whether to reoccupy a city, in this case New Orleans, is really a multiple issue decision.
    • In cases in which private owners let their claim go, they still often find support in the government for their attempts to reoccupy land under the justification that they are best able to exploit the land productively.
    • Despite being totally destroyed by fire after a siege in 585, part of the site was quickly reoccupied, to survive through to the present day.
    • They will remain in the town in a bid to prevent insurgents from reoccupying it once those Marines pull out.
    • Norfolk died in January 1476, and John the Elder hastily moved to reoccupy Caister Castle, as a letter from John the Younger indicates.
    • In February 1947, following the Battle of Hanoi, France reoccupied Hanoi and the Viet Minh once again assumed the position of guerrillas, fighting in the mountains.
    Synonyms
    return to, come back to, take up again, occupy again

Derivatives

  • reoccupation

  • noun riːɒkjʊˈpeɪʃ(ə)nˌriˌɑkjəˈpeɪʃ(ə)n
    mass noun
    • The action of occupying a place or position again.

      再占有(地方或职位)

      planning is under way for reoccupation of the building
      Example sentencesExamples
      • we analysed nest box reoccupation
      • Nevertheless, Portugal had been saved from immediate reoccupation, giving the British and the Portuguese, who completely subordinated themselves to their powerful allies throughout the war, time to prepare their defences.
      • The first fruit of this policy was the cession of southern Slovakia to Hungary in the wake of the Munich agreement in 1938, followed by the reoccupation of Carpathian Ruthenia in 1939, on the final partition of Czechoslovakia.
      • Once this is complete, the local authority can assess the safety of buildings and decide when there can be a controlled reoccupation.

Definition of reoccupy in US English:

reoccupy

verbˌrēˈäkyəˌpīˌriˈɑkjəˌpaɪ
[with object]
  • Occupy (a place or position) again.

    再占有(地方或职位)

    repairs will be required before tenants reoccupy the building
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Allies would keep their military forces on the Rhine to enforce payment and have the right to reoccupy German territory in the event of default.
    • France, however, hoped to reassert control over Indo-China and reoccupied the main cities.
    • In February 1947, following the Battle of Hanoi, France reoccupied Hanoi and the Viet Minh once again assumed the position of guerrillas, fighting in the mountains.
    • In cases in which private owners let their claim go, they still often find support in the government for their attempts to reoccupy land under the justification that they are best able to exploit the land productively.
    • Well, the decision of whether to reoccupy a city, in this case New Orleans, is really a multiple issue decision.
    • When the French launched a campaign to reoccupy the region, a ruthless war ensued.
    • When the Red Army reoccupied these areas whole nations, including party members, were deported and accused of collaboration.
    • One contingent of British troops reached the oilfields of Baku, which it occupied until September, when the Turks reoccupied the area.
    • They reoccupied our towns, villages and refugee camps, destroyed our security infrastructure, destroyed our police station, and they said we're doing this to stop these suicide bombings.
    • The isolation of the pub from the rest of its property means that it was unlikely ever to be reoccupied for college purposes.
    • Norfolk died in January 1476, and John the Elder hastily moved to reoccupy Caister Castle, as a letter from John the Younger indicates.
    • In response, Paraguayan forces reoccupied the site.
    • When these estates were reoccupied at the end of the century it was as abandoned land given over to settlers imported by government.
    • She warned of divine punishment if the capital were not reoccupied.
    • Little is known about the Iron Age occupation, but the site was certainly reoccupied in the late C3 and C4 AD, and in Saxon times a cemetery was established within the ramparts.
    • By the end of September 1896, he had reoccupied the northernmost province of Dongola, roughly halfway to Khartoum.
    • But the Israeli government should ask itself about what they are doing today, and their decision to reoccupy our cities.
    • Despite being totally destroyed by fire after a siege in 585, part of the site was quickly reoccupied, to survive through to the present day.
    • They will remain in the town in a bid to prevent insurgents from reoccupying it once those Marines pull out.
    • When Germany reoccupied the Rhineland in March 1936, the French government initially made belligerent noises, but once it became clear that Britain would not provide support, the French quietly acquiesced.
    Synonyms
    return to, come back to, take up again, occupy again
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更新时间:2024/12/27 18:35:42