Recuperate in a sentence as a verb

Then he sacrifices money to recuperate his health.

At least I'm only 31 and can still recuperate from above financial setbacks.

I'd be lucky to even recuperate the $25 registration fee for Google Play.

Make it Thursday night - Sunday afternoon, and give them Monday off to recuperate/run errands/catch up on life.

In Belgium they still recuperate between 100 and 200 tons of ammunition per year.

For example using surplus power to pump water up hill, to later recuperate during peak hours?

Whatsapp makes extremely little revenue right now - like it would take Facebook hundreds of years to recuperate what they paid [1].

I love my job and work crazy hours, but I struggle with burnout regularly, and often need to disengage from work for periods of time in order to recuperate.

It seems like there must be a reason why the adenosine signals that it's time to sleep - like your brain actually needs that rest to recuperate properly after activity.

Most quality content, however, takes a very big time investment to produce properly, and it is often impossible to recuperate that investment through advertising revenue alone.

If you want to argue for a hidden catch, then yes -- maybe at startups there will be a higher incidence of crunch-weeks where the team will be required to pull longer hours to put out fires -- but this shouldn't be the "norm".At the end of the week, you're going to need enough time to recuperate and rest.

Why is Microsoft being such pussies and using the legal system or any means necessary, moral or not, to stop Android, instead of competing in the market like everybody else?It's Microsoft who are the ones crying Android is stealing their mobile business because they were 2 years late to the game, and now they try to recuperate by exploiting the patent system, instead of catching up with their own technology - you know the stuff that really matters in the end - what you have to show for yourself - not some patents on a paper.

Recuperate definitions

verb

regain or make up for; "recuperate one's losses"

See also: recover recoup

verb

regain a former condition after a financial loss; "We expect the stocks to recover to $2.90"; "The company managed to recuperate"

See also: recover

verb

restore to good health or strength

verb

get over an illness or shock; "The patient is recuperating"

See also: recover convalesce