The Collaborative International Dictionary
Reland \Re*land"\, v. i. To go on shore after having embarked; to land again.
Reland \Re*land"\ (r?-l?nd"), v. t. To land again; to put on land, as that which had been shipped or embarked.
Wiktionary
vb. 1 To land again. 2 To return to shore after having embarked.
Usage examples of "reland".
Arabella, being duly betrothed to Reland, had the good sense to ask you to leave.
Devlin had done much to strengthen her judgment that he was a crude, inconsiderate boor who boasted mightily of his own prowess, and in this, he had surely proven himself kin to Reland Huxford.
In sharp contrast Reland was a dark-haired bear of a man whose wide, muscular chest tapered to narrow hips.
Unprepared for this abrupt turn of events, Reland had soared through the air with limbs flailing helplessly until he crashed to earth flat on his back.
Faced with this new threat, Elise recalled her decision to beat a hasty retreat into the house, but Reland had seen her move and determined otherwise.
When she looked around, she had found Reland thrashing facedown in a nearby pond.
Growling a profanity, Reland seized her by the collar and, lifting her from her feet, began to shake her violently.
Almost as an afterthought Reland clutched his aching head, moaning his discomfort.
The bridegroom, Reland, had toasted more liberally than many of the others and was sluggish and slow as he braced his broad hands on the table and pushed himself to his feet.
Placated, Reland stumbled forward a step and stood with legs braced wide apart as he gazed about him with heavily lidded eyes.
The Marquess awaited him with sword in hand, and though there remained only a short distance between them, it seemed to Reland that he stared at his adversary through a long, narrow corridor.
She was well aware that both Reland Huxford and Forsworth Radborne might desire revenge upon her, and though the prideful Forsworth had no claim to a title, he had always enjoyed putting on airs and thinking of himself as some exalted personage.
Horse and man seemed like one, but when Reland had ridden the stallion his commands had usually been accompanied by a heavy-handed sawing on the reins and a pronounced flogging of the heels.
Though his comment was very much her own opinion of Reland, she would not give him the satisfaction of hearing such a confession from her lips.
That is why Maracci and Reland could understand Jews and Christians yielding to the temptation of joining Islam, and that also explains why Catholic and Protestant dogmatists could accuse each other of Crypto-mohammedanism.