reiterate
71Ingeminating — Ingeminate In*gem i*nate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Ingeminated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Ingeminating}.] [L. ingeminatus, p. p. of ingeminare to double; pref. in in + geminare. See {Geminate}.] To redouble or repeat; to reiterate. Clarendon. [1913 Webster] …
72Re- — (r[=e] ). [L. re , older form (retained before vowels) red : cf. F. re , r[ e] .] A prefix signifying back, against, again, anew; as, recline, to lean back; recall, to call back; recede; remove; reclaim, to call out against; repugn, to fight… …
73Reiterant — Re*it er*ant (r? ?t ?r ant), a. [See {Reiterate}.] Reiterating. [R.] Mrs. Browning. [1913 Webster] …
74iterate — transitive verb ( ated; ating) Etymology: Latin iteratus, past participle of iterare, from iterum again; akin to Latin is he, that, ita thus, Sanskrit itara the other, iti thus Date: 1533 to say or do again or again and again ; reiterate …
75resume — verb (resumed; resuming) Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French or Latin; Anglo French resumer, from Latin resumere, from re + sumere to take up, take more at consume Date: 15th century transitive verb 1. to assume or take again ; reoccupy… …
76hammer — I. noun Etymology: Middle English hamer, from Old English hamor; akin to Old High German hamar hammer, and perhaps to Old Church Slavic kamen , kamy stone, Greek akmē point, edge more at edge Date: before 12th century 1. a. a hand tool consisting …
77reiteration — noun see reiterate …
78reiterative — adjective see reiterate …
79reiteratively — adverb see reiterate …
80Apollo program — insignia Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin walking o …