[
US
/ɹiˈdʒɛnɝˈeɪʃən/
]
[ UK /ɹiːdʒˌɛnəɹˈeɪʃən/ ]
[ UK /ɹiːdʒˌɛnəɹˈeɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
- feedback in phase with (augmenting) the input
- the activity of spiritual or physical renewal
- (biology) growth anew of lost tissue or destroyed parts or organs
- forming again (especially with improvements or removal of defects); renewing and reconstituting
How To Use regeneration In A Sentence
- These changes will continue the process of renewal and regeneration.
- Such actively passive self-surrender is thus the necessary beginning of the regeneration on which loving union depends. The Times Literary Supplement
- The council is committed to a programme of urban regeneration.
- That capacity for regeneration means that the cerebral wiring for our own store of knowledge and memories, which grows as we do, is as unique as a thumbprint.
- As it is, whenever sport-led regeneration is proposed in this country, the public is fobbed off with stat-free waffle about how it will benefit and regenerate local communities – and in some cases, we seem to be dispensing with even that fig leaf. Stanley Park will bring little benefit to local community in Liverpool
- Several other typical mesophytic forest species, both shade-intolerant and shade-tolerant, have declined, perhaps due to an absence of large-scale disturbance needed for their regeneration.
- Grapefruit, bananas and cloves will soon be growing in Sheffield as the next phase of the regeneration of the city's Botanical Gardens nears completion.
- Prompted by this discovery, researchers are developing biomaterials specifically for the regeneration and repair of tissue, shifting the emphasis from replacement of tissues to regeneration.
- Hyssop is an oil useful to the regeneration of the skin and is a good addition to the bath, homemade lotions or body oils as a result.
- It will also contribute to the economic and social regeneration of Mayo and the north-west region and to sustainable development of the area.