Definition of Recovered in English :

Define Recovered in English

Recovered meaning in English

Meaning of Recovered in English

Pronunciation of Recovered in English

Recovered pronunciation in English

Pronounce Recovered in English

Recovered

see synonyms of recovered

Adjective

1. cured, healed, recovered

freed from illness or injury

Example Sentences:
'the patient appears cured'
'the incision is healed'
'appears to be entirely recovered'
'when the recovered patient tries to remember what occurred during his delirium'

2. recovered

found after being lost

WordNet Lexical Database for English. Princeton University. 2010.


Recovered

see synonyms of recovered
adjective
(of a person) cured, healed, or having regained health after an illness
He is fully recovered from the virus.

Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers


Recovered

see synonyms of recovered
v. re·cov·ered, re·cov·er·ing, re·cov·ers
v.tr.
1.
a. To get back (something lost or taken away), especially by making an effort: recovered his keys near the water cooler; recovered the ball in the end zone.
b. To search for, find, and bring back: divers recovered the body; researchers recovering fossils.
c. To get back control or possession of (land) by military conquest or legal action.
2.
a. To have (the use, possession, or control of something) restored: recovered the use of his fingers.
b. To regain the use of (a faculty) or be restored to (a normal or usual condition): recovered his wits after hearing the news; recovered his health after treatment.
c. To cause to be restored to a normal or usual condition: After two weeks on the medicine, he was fully recovered.
3. To discover or be able to follow (a trail or scent) after losing it.
4.
a. To procure (usable substances, such as metal) from unusable substances, such as ore or waste.
b. To bring (land) into or return to a suitable condition for use; reclaim.
5. To bring under observation again: "watching the comet since it was first recoveredfirst spotted since its 1910 visit" (Christian Science Monitor).
v.intr.
1. To regain a normal or usual condition, as of health: a patient who recovered from the flu; businesses that recovered quickly from the recession.
2. To receive a favorable judgment in a lawsuit.

The American Heritage ® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition copyright ©2018 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.