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rebury

[ UK /ɹˈɛbɹi/ ]
VERB
  1. bury again
    After the king's body had been exhumed and tested to traces of poison, it was reburied in the same spot

How To Use rebury In A Sentence

  • Burns admitted some weeks later that he had returned to the area, which he knew well from playing as a child, and after spotting one leg bone had been uncovered by a dog, bought a second spade to rebury it.
  • Scientists object to Ministry of Justice rules which force them to rebury bones after just two years Burial law is threatening archaeological research, say experts
  • His family chose to rebury him in the same place, still wrapped in the same simple, white Remains Returned List WWII
  • But it didn't match any modern Indian tribe, a finding that Indians see as the latest scheme to deny tribes the right to repatriate and rebury such remains.
  • But it didn't match any modern Indian tribe, a finding that Indians see as the latest scheme to deny tribes the right to repatriate and rebury such remains.
  • Scientists are already facing the prospect of having to rebury a horde of human bone fragments, the remains of more than 50 individuals, that were excavated in 2008 at a site known as Aubrey Hole 7, which is part of the Stonehenge Riverside Project. Burial law is threatening archaeological research, say experts
  • There have been small victories at a local level, with villages achieving exhumations of mass graves, reburying their dead and erecting monuments.
  • In fact he had his own office and a considerably larger area of carpet than anyone in Berebury suspected.
  • And if you dig them up and then rebury them in various different places, that adds to the flavour.
  • Charley had emerged from his ordeal more devoted to me than ever while I was now free to rebury Samson in the nostalgia drawer of my memory. ABSOLUTE TRUTHS
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