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|
med. |
rate difference; repair mechanism |
nucl.phys. |
corrective action |
pharma., mech.eng. |
recovery phase |
|
|
commun. |
reset |
comp., MS |
remediation (The act of bringing a system or piece of software into compliance with a policy or configuration intent) |
environ. |
cleanup; regeneration; rehabilitation; renovation; restoration; remediation; regeneration The renewing or reuse of materials such as activated carbon, single ion exchange resins, and filter beds by appropriate means to remove organics, metals, solids, etc.; rehabilitation A conservation measure involving the correction of past abuses that have impaired the productivity of the resources base; restoration The process of renewing or returning something to its original, normal or unimpaired condition, particularly works of art, cultural artifacts, furniture or buildings; remedying |
health. |
recovery |
law, environ. |
redress |
med. |
restitution; repair |
pharma., mech.eng. |
convalescence |
transp. |
resetting |
transp., agric., construct. |
repairs |
|
|
comp., MS |
recover (To put back into a stable condition. A computer user may be able to recover lost or damaged data by using a program to search for and salvage whatever information remains in storage. A database may be recovered by restoring its integrity after some problem has damaged it, such as abnormal termination of the database management program); restore (A multi-phase process that copies all the data and log pages from a specified backup to a specified database (the data-copy phase) and rolls forward all the transactions that are logged in the backup (the redo phase). At this point, by default, a restore rolls back any incomplete transactions (the undo phase), which completes the recovery of the database and makes it available to users) |
el. |
recover |
environ. |
remediation; remedying; redress An administrative or legal remedy that attempts to restore a person to his or her original or expected position prior to loss or injury, including breach of contract |
industr. |
mending |
law, environ. |
redress |
polit., law |
to put in order |
transp., mech.eng. |
doing up |