| restock |
combined form of stock. |
| restoke |
combined form of stoke. |
| rest on one's laurels |
to be content with past achievements and not interested in striving further. |
| restoration |
the act or process of restoring. [5 definitions] |
| restorative |
relating to restoration. [3 definitions] |
| restore |
to bring back into use or existence. [5 definitions] |
| restrain |
to hold back or keep in check. [3 definitions] |
| re-strain |
to strain again. |
| restrainable |
combined form of restrain. |
| restrained |
showing or marked by restraint; not yielding to excess or extremity. |
| restrainer |
someone or something that restrains. |
| restraint |
the act or process of restraining oneself or others. [4 definitions] |
| restraint of trade |
restriction on the free flow of commercial goods, as by monopoly, price fixing, and other practices, in order to reduce competition. |
| restrengthen |
combined form of strengthen. |
| restress |
combined form of stress. |
| restrict |
to keep within limits; set bounds to; confine. |
| restricted |
limited or confined within a certain sphere. [2 definitions] |
| restriction |
something that limits, confines, or restricts. [2 definitions] |
| restrictionism |
the policy of supporting restriction or limitation, as of trade, immigration, use of land, or the like. |
| restrictive |
having the effect of restricting. [3 definitions] |
| restrictive covenant |
in an agreement or contract, a restriction on the action of one of the parties, esp. the prohibition, now illegal in the United States, of rental or sale of real estate to someone of a specified minority or ethnic group. |