make+stronger

  • 71Jesse Babcock Ferguson — (January 19, 1819–September 3 or September 4, 1870) was an American Christian preacher who developed Spiritualist leanings in the 1840s and 1850s while serving as the preacher at the Nashville, Tennessee Church of Christ. He edited a periodical… …

    Wikipedia

  • 72Marilyn Pryor — Marilyn Valeria Pryor (née Lobb)(1936–2005) was a New Zealand conservative Catholic, Pro life advocate, and served on the Executive Council of SPUC (the Society for Protection of the Unborn Child now Voice for Life), as well as administrative… …

    Wikipedia

  • 73pep up — verb To make stronger or more interesting Were looking for ideas to pep up the new campaign …

    Wiktionary

  • 74restrengthen — verb strengthen again, make stronger again …

    Wiktionary

  • 75consolidate — verb /kənˈsɒlɪdeɪt/ a) To combine into a single unit; to group together or join. He consolidated his luggage into a single large bag. b) To make stronger or more solid. See Also: consolidation, consolidator …

    Wiktionary

  • 76Ретроградное движение — Эта статья  о обратном движении небесных тел относительно центрального объекта. О видимом обратном движении по небесной сфере (попятном движении) см. Движение Солнца и планет по небесной сфере. Ре …

    Википедия

  • 77reinforce — re·in·force .rē ən fō(ə)rs, fȯ(ə)rs vt, forced; forc·ing 1) to strengthen by additional material or support: make stronger <reinforced with vitamins> 2) to stimulate (as an experimental animal or a student) by reinforcement also to… …

    Medical dictionary

  • 78beachhead — beach‧head [ˈbiːtʆhed] noun [countable] COMMERCE part of a market that a company obtains, hoping to obtain more of the same market or part of another larger market that is near the first one: • Telefonica gained a key beachhead in Brazil when it… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 79MADD — Mothers Against Drunk Driving a US organization, started by a woman whose daughter was killed by a driver who was drunk. It has been successful in bringing the problem of drunk driving to people s attention in the US, and in encouraging the… …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 80trim — [16] The origins of trim are uncertain, but it may come from an unrecorded Middle English verb *trimmen ‘arrange’, a descendant of Old English trymman or trymian ‘make stronger or firmer’ …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins