The Collaborative International Dictionary
Rebury \Re*bur"y\ (r[=e]*b[e^]r"r[y^]), v. t.
To bury again.
--Ashmole.
Wiktionary
vb. bury again
WordNet
v. bury again; "After the king's body had been exhumed and tested to traces of poison, it was reburied in the same spot"
Usage examples of "rebury".
We had to rebury Inahooli and do it the right way, with singing and with gifts of parting.
Perhaps the ones who went down south and dug him up have passed the word about who was to be reburied, for the diggers knew all about the body in that casket.
At least once, she chased away a dog that had dug the body up and she reburied the tiny corpse.
Rey unearthed the pouch of money exactly where Longfellow and Holmes had reburied it.
XLVI When the dust storms had reburied the remains of the first Tyne Apocalypse and had at least spread a thin coating of dust over the rotting remains of the second, and when all had cooled to a bearable temperature, a small speck appeared on the southwestern horizon of the Sea.
With here and there assortments of human bones, half buried in the sand, being unburied and reburied by the wind.
They reburied the chest in the place whence they had taken it, and then the parson folded the precious paper of directions, placed it carefully in his wallet, and his wallet in his pocket.
I can, I shall have him reburied, openly, and with honor, in the tradition of Ezlann.
Scowling, she reburied the memories with haste and pushed the clothes aside.
His mind made a kind of automatic comparison between the ease of this dig and the rocky, unforgiving ground of the place where, if all went well, he would be reburying his son later on this night.
He wrapped the manuscript in its swaddling cloth and reburied it in the storeroom cellar.