Synonyms of the word recuperate


RECUPERATEACQUIRE - AMELIORATE - BETTER - CONVALESCE - CURE - GET - HEAL - IMPROVE - MELIORATE - RECOUP - RECOVER - REGRESS - RETROVERT - RETURN - REVERT

recuperate

  • v. To recover, especially from an illness; to get better from an illness.
  • v. (sociology) To co-opt subversive ideas for mainstream use.

acquire

  • v. (transitive) To get.
  • v. (transitive) To gain, usually by one's own exertions; to get as one's own.
  • v. (medicine) To contract.
  • v. (computing) To sample signals and convert them into digital values.

ameliorate

  • v. (transitive) To make better, or improve, something perceived to be in a negative condition.

better

  • adj. comparative form of good: more good.
  • adj. comparative form of well: more well.
  • adv. comparative form of well: more well.
  • adv. More, in reference to value, distance, time, etc.
  • n. An entity, usually animate, deemed superior to another; one who has a claim to precedence; a superior.
  • v. (transitive) To improve.
  • v. (intransitive) To become better; to improve.
  • v. (transitive) To surpass in excellence; to exceed; to excel.
  • v. (transitive) To give advantage to; to support; to advance the interest of.
  • v. (colloquial) Had better.
  • n. Alternative spelling of bettor.

convalesce

  • v. To recover health and strength gradually after sickness or weakness.

cure

  • n. A method, device or medication that restores good health.
  • n. Act of healing or state of being healed; restoration to health from disease, or to soundness after injury.
  • n. A solution to a problem.
  • n. A process of preservation, as by smoking.
  • n. A process of solidification or gelling.
  • n. (engineering) A process whereby a material is caused to form permanent molecular linkages by exposure…
  • n. (obsolete) Care, heed, or attention.
  • n. Spiritual charge; care of soul; the office of a parish priest or of a curate.
  • n. That which is committed to the charge of a parish priest or of a curate; a curacy.
  • v. (transitive) To restore to health.
  • v. (transitive) To bring (a disease or its bad effects) to an end.
  • v. (transitive) To cause to be rid of (a defect).
  • v. (transitive) To prepare or alter especially by chemical or physical processing for keeping or use.
  • v. (intransitive) To bring about a cure of any kind.
  • v. (intransitive) To be undergoing a chemical or physical process for preservation or use.
  • v. (intransitive) To solidify or gel.
  • v. (obsolete, intransitive) To become healed.
  • v. (obsolete) To pay heed; to care; to give attention.

get

  • v. (transitive) To obtain; to acquire.
  • v. (transitive) To receive.
  • v. (transitive, in a perfect construction, with present-tense meaning) To have. See usage notes.
  • v. (copulative) To become.
  • v. (transitive) To cause to become; to bring about.
  • v. (transitive) To fetch, bring, take.
  • v. (transitive) To cause to do.
  • v. (intransitive, with various prepositions, such as into, over, or behind; for specific idiomatic senses…
  • v. (transitive) To cover (a certain distance) while travelling.
  • v. (transitive) To cause to come or go or move.
  • v. (transitive) To cause to be in a certain status or position.
  • v. (intransitive) To begin (doing something).
  • v. (transitive) To take or catch (a scheduled transportation service).
  • v. (transitive) To respond to (a telephone call, a doorbell, etc).
  • v. (intransitive, followed by infinitive) To be able, permitted (to do something); to have the opportunity…
  • v. (transitive, informal) To understand. (compare get it).
  • v. (transitive, informal) To be subjected to.
  • v. (informal) To be. Used to form the passive of verbs.
  • v. (transitive) To become ill with or catch (a disease).
  • v. (transitive, informal) To catch out, trick successfully.
  • v. (transitive, informal) To perplex, stump.
  • v. (transitive) To find as an answer.
  • v. (transitive, informal) To bring to reckoning; to catch (as a criminal); to effect retribution.
  • v. (transitive) To hear completely; catch.
  • v. (transitive) To getter.
  • v. (now rare) To beget (of a father).
  • v. (archaic) To learn; to commit to memory; to memorize; sometimes with out.
  • v. (imperative, informal) Used with a personal pronoun to indicate that someone is being pretentious or grandiose.
  • v. (imperative, informal) Go away; get lost.
  • v. (euphemistic) To kill.
  • v. (intransitive, obsolete) To make acquisitions; to gain; to profit.
  • n. Offspring.
  • n. Lineage.
  • n. (sports, tennis) A difficult return or block of a shot.
  • n. Something gained.
  • n. (Britain, regional) A git.
  • n. (Judaism) A Jewish writ of divorce.

heal

  • v. (transitive, obsolete or dialectal) To hide; conceal; keep secret.
  • v. (transitive) To cover, as for protection.
  • v. (transitive) To make better from a disease, wound, etc.; to revive or cure.
  • v. (intransitive) To become better.
  • v. To reconcile, as a breach or difference; to make whole; to free from guilt.
  • n. (role-playing games, countable) A spell or ability that restores hit points or removes a status ailment.
  • n. (obsolete, uncountable) health.

improve

  • v. (transitive) To make (something) better; to increase the value or productivity (of something).
  • v. (intransitive) To become better.
  • v. (obsolete) To disprove or make void; to refute.
  • v. (obsolete) To disapprove of; to find fault with; to reprove; to censure.
  • v. (dated) To use or employ to good purpose; to turn to profitable account.

meliorate

  • v. (transitive) To make better, to improve; to heal or solve a problem.

recoup

  • v. To make back, as an investment.
  • v. To recover from an error.
  • v. (law) To keep back rightfully (a part), as if by cutting off, so as to diminish a sum due; to take off…
  • v. (transitive) To reimburse; to indemnify; often used reflexively and in the passive.

recover

  • v. (transitive) To get back, regain (a physical thing lost etc.).
  • v. (transitive) To return to, resume (a given state of mind or body).
  • v. (transitive, obsolete) To reach (a place), arrive at.
  • v. (transitive, archaic) To restore to good health, consciousness, life etc.
  • v. (transitive, archaic) To make good by reparation; to make up for; to retrieve; to repair the loss or injury…
  • v. (transitive, archaic) To get better from; to get over.
  • v. (intransitive) To get better, regain one's health.
  • v. (intransitive) To regain one's composure, balance etc.
  • v. (intransitive, law) To obtain a judgement; to succeed in a lawsuit.
  • v. (transitive, law) To gain as compensation or reparation.
  • v. (transitive, law) To gain by legal process.
  • n. (obsolete) Recovery.
  • n. (military) A position of holding a firearm during exercises, whereby the lock is at shoulder height and…
  • v. To cover again.
  • v. (roofing) To add a new roof membrane or steep-slope covering over an existing one.

regress

  • n. The act of passing back; passage back; return; retrogression.
  • n. The power or liberty of passing back.
  • n. In property law, the right of a person (such as a lessee) to return to a property.
  • v. (intransitive) To move backwards to an earlier stage; to devolve.
  • v. (transitive, statistics) To perform a regression on an explanatory variable.

retrovert

  • v. To turn back.

return

  • v. (intransitive) To come or go back (to a place or person).
  • v. (intransitive) To go back in thought, narration, or argument.
  • v. (intransitive, obsolete) To turn back, retreat.
  • v. (transitive, obsolete) To turn (something) round.
  • v. (transitive) To place or put back something where it had been.
  • v. (transitive) To give something back to its original holder or owner.
  • v. (transitive) To take back something to a vendor for a refund.
  • v. To give in requital or recompense; to requite.
  • v. (tennis) To bat the ball back over the net in response to a serve.
  • v. (card games) To play a card as a result of another player's lead.
  • v. (cricket) To throw a ball back to the wicket-keeper (or a fielder at that position) from somewhere in…
  • v. (transitive) To say in reply; to respond.
  • v. (intransitive, computing) To relinquish control to the calling procedure.
  • v. (transitive, computing) To pass (data) back to the calling procedure.
  • v. (transitive, dated) To retort; to throw back.
  • v. (transitive) To report, or bring back and make known.
  • v. (by extension, Britain) To elect according to the official report of the election officers.
  • n. The act of returning.
  • n. A return ticket.
  • n. An item that is returned, e.g. due to a defect, or the act of returning it.
  • n. An answer.
  • n. An account, or formal report, of an action performed, of a duty discharged, of facts or statistics, etc…
  • n. Gain or loss from an investment.
  • n. (taxation, finance): A report of income submitted to a government for purposes of specifying exact tax…
  • n. (computing) A carriage return character.
  • n. (computing) The act of relinquishing control to the calling procedure.
  • n. (computing) A return value: the data passed back from a called procedure.
  • n. A short perpendicular extension of a desk, usually slightly lower.
  • n. (American football) Catching a ball after a punt and running it back towards the opposing team.
  • n. (cricket) A throw from a fielder to the wicket-keeper or to another fielder at the wicket.
  • n. (architecture) The continuation in a different direction, most often at a right angle, of a building,…

revert

  • n. One who, or that which, reverts.
  • n. (religion) One who reverts to that religion which he had adhered to before having converted to another.
  • n. (Islam, due to the belief that all people are born Muslim) A convert to Islam.
  • n. (computing) The act of reversion (of e.g. a database transaction or source control repository) to an earlier…
  • v. (transitive, now rare) To turn back, or turn to the contrary; to reverse.
  • v. To throw back; to reflect; to reverberate.
  • v. (transitive) To cause to return to a former condition.
  • v. (intransitive, now rare) To return; to come back.
  • v. (intransitive) To return to the possession of.
  • v. (transitive) To cause (a property or rights) to return to the previous owner.
  • v. (intransitive) To return to a former practice, condition, belief, etc.
  • v. (intransitive, biology) To return to an earlier or primitive type or state; to take on the traits or characters…
  • v. (intransitive) To change back, as from a soluble to an insoluble state or the reverse.
  • v. (intransitive) To take up again or return to a previous topic.
  • v. (intransitive, in Muslim usage, due to the belief that all people are born Muslim) To convert to Islam.
  • v. (intransitive, nonstandard, proscribed, often India) To reply; to come back.
  • v. (transitive, mathematics) To treat (a series, such as y = a + bx + cx2 + …, where one variable y is expressed…

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