regain+health
61mend — {{11}}mend (n.) early 14c., recompense, reparation, from MEND (Cf. mend) (v.). Meaning act of mending; a repaired hole or rip in fabric is from 1888. Phrase on the mend attested from 1802. {{12}}mend (v.) c.1200, to repair, from an aphetic form… …
62wydobrzeć — Odzyskać zdrowie po wypadku lub okresie choroby Eng. To live in spite of illness or wounds; to regain health …
63wylizać się — Odzyskać zdrowie po wypadku lub okresie choroby Eng. To live in spite of illness or wounds; to regain health …
64recuperate — re•cu•per•ate [[t]rɪˈku pəˌreɪt, ˈkyu [/t]] v. i. at•ed, at•ing 1) med to recover from sickness or exhaustion; regain health or strength 2) to recover from financial loss • Etymology: 1535–45; < L recuperātus, ptp. of recuperāre, var. of… …
65pick — I. /pɪk / (say pik) verb (t) 1. to choose or select carefully. 2. to choose (one s way or steps), as over rough ground or through a crowd. 3. to seek and find occasion for: to pick a quarrel. 4. to seek or find (flaws) in a spirit of fault… …
66pick — pick1 [pik] vt. [ME pykken, var. of picchen, to PITCH2] Weaving to throw (a shuttle) n. 1. one passage or throw of the shuttle of a loom 2. one of the weft threads, or filling yarns pick2 [pik] n. [ …
67rally — 1. v. & n. v. ( ies, ied) 1 tr. & intr. (often foll. by round, behind, to) bring or come together as support or for concentrated action. 2 tr. & intr. bring or come together again after a rout or dispersion. 3 a intr. renew a conflict. b tr.… …
68recuperate — v. 1 intr. recover from illness, exhaustion, loss, etc. 2 tr. regain (health, something lost, etc.). Derivatives: recuperable adj. recuperation n. recuperative adj. recuperator n. Etymology: L recuperare recuperat recover …
69be oneself again — regain one s health …
70Germany — /jerr meuh nee/, n. a republic in central Europe: after World War II divided into four zones, British, French, U.S., and Soviet, and in 1949 into East Germany and West Germany; East and West Germany were reunited in 1990. 84,068,216; 137,852 sq.… …