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reconstruction

/ree-kuhn-struhk-shuhn/US // ˌri kənˈstrʌk ʃən //UK // (ˌriːkənˈstrʌkʃən) //

重建,重建工作,重建工程,重建的

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the act of reconstructing, rebuilding, or reassembling, or the state of being reconstructed: the gigantic task of reconstruction after a fire.
    • : something reconstructed, rebuilt, or reassembled: a reconstruction of the sequence of events leading to his death; accurate reconstructions of ancient Greek buildings.
    • : U.S. History. the process by which the states that had seceded were reorganized as part of the Union after the Civil War.the period during which this took place, 1865–77.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The project will close the Addison Road and Arlington Cemetery stations for platform reconstruction, part of Metro’s multiyear, $431 million project to replace and upgrade deteriorating platforms at 20 stations.

  • Even harder, he’ll have to do that personal reconstruction while making his debut appearance on Broadway.

  • The problem, called the Holocene warming conundrum, is that previous reconstructions of the historical climate showed a warm period from 6,000 to 10,000 years ago, followed by a period of cooling.

  • Their design was based on a historic reconstruction of the Stonehenge of 4,200 years ago.

  • I think probably a lot of people didn’t realize exactly what compromises would be necessary to deliver on these promises of reconstruction.

  • Excerpted from Capitol Men: The Epic Story of Reconstruction Through the Lives of the First Black Congressmen by Philip Dray.

  • Ed Brooke, the first African-American Senator since Reconstruction, embraced fights with the left and right.

  • Congress created SIGAR to provide oversight of relief and reconstruction projects in Afghanistan.

  • The 1950s, observed C. Vann Woodward, resembled the era of Reconstruction in many ways.

  • One case in particular became the focus of Stuart Bowen, Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction.

  • He stepped gladly into the building and the door shut with the familiar thunder that completed the reconstruction of the past.

  • Any change for good among such would be to their dissolution and reconstruction on principles which they do not now hold.

  • Correct views of a vow, as altogether wrong, should lead to its abandonment, or a total reconstruction of it.

  • In these methods there is needed no reconstruction of previous images, no piecing together of a number of fragments.

  • There would follow, I calculated, a period of profound reconstruction in method and policy alike.