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Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
reunification

1852; see re- + unification.

Wiktionary
reunification

n. The unification of something that was previously divided; used especially of a country.

WordNet
reunification

n. the act of coming together again; "monetary unification precipitated the reunification of the German state in October 1990" [syn: reunion]

Wikipedia
Reunification
  1. redirect Political union

de:Wiedervereinigung fr:Réunification id:Reunifikasi it:Riunificazione nl:Hereniging ja:再統一 no:Gjenforening pt:Reunificação

Usage examples of "reunification".

Trotsky, in 1917, unhesitatingly admitted his mistake and once and for all put out of his mind any idea of reunification with the Mensheviks.

Still, I believe that King Tedric would prefer to ally himself with us with eventual reunification in mind.

If something takes Shad before me, Sapphire shall still follow me and reunification continue.

But it might interest you to know that the same protestors I told you about earlier are calling for reunification talks to begin with the North.

If reunification goes as some expect, we would have the first significant Communist expansion in two decades.

The ranking delegate of the Reunification Democratic Party had taken the stage.

The nearest thing available was the podium at which the representatives to the assembly had been taking turns denouncing America and calling for reunification talks with the North.

Only the Reunification Democratic Party was talking, and then only in cryptic statements.

Internal stresses kept Hanoi too preoccupied in its own territory to launch war against the South, but reunification remained the fixed goal.

German reunification talks are going ahead, the papers are full of it.

The Russians had announced the six-man team that would go to Copenhagen for the German reunification talks.

The woman leading the Russian delegation to the German reunification talks was fast becoming a cult figure in the West.

The king will try to persuade Parliament to allow greater toleration of Catholics, and is confident that this first step will lead to many others, before the reunification of the churches can proceed.

Since reunification, New Englanders and Canadian annexees were theoretically entitled to full citizenship with all its rights, but there was always that coded notation in their passbooks.

The city, the whole state and nation, would gain by the reunification of so large an area.