English language

How to pronounce recuperate in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms recoup, recover
Type of acquire, get
Has types catch up with, make up


recuperate one's losses.
Type Words
Synonyms convalesce, recover
Type of meliorate, ameliorate, better, improve
Has types gain vigor, pick up, perk up, snap back, perk, percolate
Derivation recuperation, recuperative
Type Words
Synonyms go back, recover
Type of turn back, regress, retrovert, return, revert
Has types rally, rebound


The company managed to recuperate.
Type Words
Type of cure, bring around, heal
Verb group convalesce, recover
Derivation recuperation, recuperative

Examples of recuperate

recuperate
She will then stay in the area for weeks for a follow-up exam and to recuperate.
From the heraldtribune.com
Another handful were injured and were forced to recuperate for months at a time.
From the kentucky.com
You have to recuperate after writing a book, and I don't have anything lined up.
From the latimes.com
Jack gets Albert building work but he is injured and returns home to recuperate.
From the en.wikipedia.org
In 1888, Lummis moved to San Mateo, New Mexico to recuperate from his paralysis.
From the en.wikipedia.org
She helps him recuperate, and is with him with Eden calls her brother for help.
From the kentucky.com
He began about a year ago as a way to recuperate from a liver transplant in 2006.
From the thenewstribune.com
They can't say how much he'll recuperate or how much of Josh will still be there.
From the tennessean.com
He was hospitalized for 10 days after that to recuperate from double pneumonia.
From the ocregister.com
More examples
  • Recover: regain or make up for; "recuperate one's losses"
  • Recover: regain a former condition after a financial loss; "We expect the stocks to recover to $2.90"; "The company managed to recuperate"
  • Restore to good health or strength
  • Get over an illness or shock; "The patient is recuperating"
  • (recuperation) convalescence: gradual healing (through rest) after sickness or injury
  • (Recuperation (recovery)) Recuperation, in common usage, refers to a period of recovery. This has many uses, from medicine, in which sense it refers to the process by which medical patients recover from disease, injury, or mental illness, or finance, where it refers to the financial recovery of ...
  • (Recuperation (sociology)) Recuperation, in the sociological sense (first proposed by Guy Debord and the Situationists), is the process by which "radical" ideas and images are commodified and incorporated within mainstream society, such as the movement for civil rights in the United States or ...
  • To recover, especially from an illness; to get better from an illness; To co-opt subversive ideas for mainstream use
  • (recuperation) [JP 1-02] (DoD) Not to be used. See recovery and reconstitution.