Verb
reacquire (third-person singular simple present reacquires, present participle reacquiring, simple past and past participle reacquired)
acquire again
American President Roosevelt and General Stilwell privately made it adamantly clear that the French were not to reacquire French Indochina after the war was over. Source: Internet
In the deal to reacquire Rubio, the Wolves sent the 17th pick in this year’s draft, Aleksej Pokuševski, a second-round pick in 2024 and James Johnson to the Thunder in exchange for Rubio and the No. 28 pick, Jaden McDaniels. Source: Internet
Scrooge is seen in this story attempting to reacquire a magic hourglass that he gave to Donald, before finding out that it acted as a protective charm for him. Source: Internet
Attempts to reacquire Mariner 5 during June, July, and early August 1968 yielded no spacecraft signal. Source: Internet
The earnings have also been used to reacquire lands near the reservation and lay an infrastructure for the benefit of future generations. Source: Internet
The answer is yes because during these nine months, every Jew learns all of Torah and thus gains the potential to reacquire it during his life. Source: Internet