Reclaim in a sentence as a verb

Hopefully they can continue on and reclaim some of their former glory as well, and let's hope Carmack keeps in the spotlight.

Even in the case of minor fraud, they would likely spend more in manpower than they could possibly reclaim from such a low-earning outfit.

When we hit a threshold we look for the extent with the most garbage copy all of the non garbage blocks to an active extent and then reclaim the extent.

It's a tale of a misspent youth, wasted 20's, and a procrastinating disaffected attempt to reclaim my life as I now begin my 30's.

IT is not a valid reason to reclaim unvested stock, those are looked at like current compensation when termination is unjust.

But what about this:"Drivers who choose to swap must reclaim their original battery on their return trip or pay the difference in cost for the new pack.

See: pull to refresh, launch screens, side menus, etc. Apple can, and should, reclaim its position as being at the leading edge of its own platform.- Lack of a proper inter-app communications channel.

Perhaps, as we listen to superstars less and to ordinary people more, the pressure to play like a superstar or not play at all will drop away and we'll reclaim the tradition of participatory music that we've been robbed of.

So... one guy did all this, it was inappropriate, but you're keeping him on board?I think the purpose of this blog post was to try to reclaim this*'s reputation after the incident, but for me it just solidified that i should never, ever use thiswebhost.

Instagram photos of opulent tech holiday parties have been lambasted, Google buses blockadedIn what universe is a carpooling system that gets dozens of cars off the road and allows each passenger to reclaim ten working hours a week classified as frivolous?

Reclaim definitions

verb

claim back

See also: repossess

verb

reuse (materials from waste products)

See also: recover

verb

bring, lead, or force to abandon a wrong or evil course of life, conduct, and adopt a right one; "The Church reformed me"; "reform your conduct"

See also: reform regenerate rectify

verb

make useful again; transform from a useless or uncultivated state; "The people reclaimed the marshes"

verb

overcome the wildness of; make docile and tractable; "He tames lions for the circus"; "reclaim falcons"

See also: domesticate domesticize domesticise tame