Rebuild in a sentence as a verb

You'll need time to get back on your feet, rebuild, and distance yourself from the emotional impact of this failure.

I hypothesize that this is a coordinated yet simple ruse to rebuild trust in these brands post-Snowden [1][2].

The reason it is this way is, again, because by the time it is recognized what a problem this is, it would simply be too expensive to rebuild the web from scratch.

I just don't want to do it if everyone else is going to make money from selling my toes except me, and they don't care about giving me time to rebuild my foot afterwards.

I suspect Yahoo will want get rid of a ton of its unproductive employees and rebuild around a small core of talent, some of which will presumably be poached from Google.

Get rid of the people that have to be let go, treat them as well as you can on the way out, and then show some serious TLC to the employees you want to retain and rebuild your culture and trust with the people who stick around.

But most people who make the world run—who care for kids, who grow food, who would rebuild after natural disasters and societal collapse—will never be rich, no matter how hard or well they work, because society is constructed with only so much room on top.> I thought of the workers busting their backs lifting boxes at warehouses, while an electronic tracker yelled at them to work faster.

Rebuild definitions

verb

build again; "The house was rebuild after it was hit by a bomb"

See also: reconstruct