Crossword clues for reconnect
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Wiktionary
vb. connect again, get a new connection for
Wikipedia
- Operation Reconnect, an international protest orchestrated by Anonymous to increase awareness of the Church of Scientology's impositions in the personal lives of its members
- Reconnect (Iris album), a remix album released by American band Iris in 2003
- "Reconnect" (song), the 2006 debut single of Director, an Irish art rock quartet
"Reconnect" was the debut single of Irish art rock quartet, Director. It was released on 24 April 2006, eventually dominating the Irish airwaves throughout the summer and receiving much radio play from Irish radio stations such as RTÉ 2fm and Today FM. The single charted in Ireland at number ten, spending a total of twelve weeks in the Irish Singles Chart.
National broadcaster, RTÉ, noted the song alongside third single " Leave It to Me" as one of the better tracks on the album, We Thrive on Big Cities.
In 2009, the Irish Independent referred to the song as "a debut single of exceptional potency", saying that its release had prompted excitement in "even those not normally given to hyperbole".
"Reconnect" was credited by some with helping Director win Best New Irish Act at the 2007 Meteor Awards.
The Irish Independents John Meagher described the video for the Valerie Francis single "Punches" as "the best Irish promo since Director's Reconnect".
Usage examples of "reconnect".
This resident wanted to do an end-to-end anastomosis of the bowels, removing a big section and then reconnecting it.
Everything that was on an open shelf or countertop had to be stowed and secured, a rubber band snapped around the roll of toilet paper, the water heater turned off, food in the fridge and cupboards cushioned against breakage, rugs rolled and furniture moved to pull in the living area and wardrobe slide-outs, awning stowed, and all the carefully reconnected propane appliances disconnected again.
DAASes, then had them reconnected to coordinate reassembly in the Hope System.
He had been the highest scorer of all time on the Academy reconnect simulator and had successfully accomplished the maneuver on both the Yorktown and the Hood.
One might even - knowing the importance that the Mercatoria attaches to reconnecting all the many, many systems which have been without Arteria access all these millennia - wonder why the expedition from Zenerre to Ulubis with a new portal was dispatched with such alacrity, given the arguably still greater claims that more populous, more classically strategically important and more at-the-time obviously threatened systems might have had upon the resources and expertise of our esteemed colleagues in the Engineering faculty.
But a fall from there would be inexorable, and we would have fallen away from the Beanstalk, with no chance to reconnect to it.
If space-time can undergo massive rearrangement of its structure, which I believe it can, tearing and reconnecting according to a pre-determined disposition, then T-duality would allow for the compactification of extra space dimensions.
The Errin hastily disengaged their hips and reconnected after he had cushioned her fall in his arms.
Cambridge had reconstructed its protohistoric traditions and the neo-British had recaptured that fine edge of engineering which reconnected their traditions with the earliest antiquity.
But, reconnect this and that, reapply power here and there, and back it would bloom into reality, as malignant and clever and full of information as before.
Everything in us gets disconnected, then reconnected again to a source of much greater power.
Milo reconnected it and the resultant spark brought starts to the other men.
We went to different junior high schools and reconnected in high school in our senior year.
My past history is filled with examples of connecting to the power of the universe, then withdrawing, then reconnecting etcetera.
Underneath was a tangle of tubes, cables, and freely-curving pipes, of various sizes and colors, smoothly branching and reconnecting, some sinking out of sight beneath the others, and the whole works set into a pinkish jellylike insulation or sealant of some kind.