Crossword clues for rehouse
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Wiktionary
vb. (context transitive English) To give a new house to; to relocate someone to a new house.
WordNet
v. put up in a new or different housing
Usage examples of "rehouse".
Even most of the damage to the Residency, which was quite slight in comparison to other parts of the city, had been repaired and her beloved horses now, thankfully, quite recovered from their ordeal, had been rehoused in newly-built stables.
Seixas, he alleged, had persuaded the president to choose this way of tackling the shantytown problem, instead of rehousing the squatters, because he held shares in a highway construction company which was likely to benefit.
I cannot allot funds for rehousing and subsidizing the squatters of the shantytowns and of the slum beneath the monorail station, not so long as there are slums in Astoria Negra and Puerto Joaquin, not so long as I require those funds to fulfill the promises I have made to the foreign-born citizens.
Second - when the plague has finally been contained, arrangements should be made over a ten-year period for the gradual rehousing of blacks in areas where their unsanitary personal habits do not threaten decent Americans.
The world of private finance would not tolerate great rehousing, great educational and socially constructive enterprises, on the part of the relatively feeble governments of the time.
Your suggestions as to freeing or rehousing the creatures are vital to their survival.
Second - when the plague has finally been contained, arrangements should be made over a ten-year period for the gradual rehousing of blacks in areas where their unsanitary personal habits do not threaten decent Americans.
Homes of families which had been rehoused, corner shops which had succumbed to the chains of giant supermarkets.
Now most of it was flat, its dwellers rehoused in cubic council apartment blocks whose soul-numbing shapes could be seen haf a mie away through the drizzle.
The pupils were correctly rehoused but appeared to be lit from within.
Flats would be found to be uninhabitable, tenants rehoused, windows and doors blocked and padlocked.