rebuttal |
a statement or contention, as in a debate or legal case, that is intended to disprove or confute another. |
rebuy |
combined form of buy. |
rec |
the act or process of engaging in a relaxing or agreeable pastime; recreation. |
rec. |
abbreviation of "recreation," the act or process of engaging in a relaxing or agreeable pastime. |
recalcitrant |
stubbornly disobedient; refractory. [3 definitions] |
recalculate |
to calculate again, esp. to check for errors. |
recalculation |
combined form of calculation. |
recalibrate |
combined form of calibrate. |
recalibration |
combined form of calibration. |
recall |
to bring to mind; remember. [6 definitions] |
recallable |
combined form of recall. |
recant |
to withdraw from commitment to (a former position or statement), esp. publicly; retract. [2 definitions] |
recap1 |
to bond new tread onto (an old tire); retread. [2 definitions] |
recap2 |
a brief rephrasing of an earlier report; summary. [2 definitions] |
recapitalize |
to renew or revise the capital structure of (a corporation). |
recapitulate |
to briefly review (the main points) of a spoken or written exchange or communication. [3 definitions] |
recapitulation |
the act of recapitulating or state of being recapitulated. [3 definitions] |
recapture |
to take or capture again; recover. [3 definitions] |
recast |
to melt down (a metal object) and pour into another mold. [5 definitions] |
recd. |
abbreviation of "received." |
recede1 |
to move back to a previous low level or point, as water. [2 definitions] |