Need another word that means the same as “recreate”? Find 26 synonyms and 30 related words for “recreate” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Recreate” are: cheer, embolden, hearten, play, animate, quicken, reanimate, renovate, repair, revive, revivify, vivify, rebuild, restore, remake, reassemble, remodel, refashion, revamp, recondition, refurbish, repeat, replicate, redo, perform again, reconstruct
Recreate as a Verb
Definitions of "Recreate" as a verb
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “recreate” as a verb can have the following definitions:
- Create anew.
- Create again.
- Give encouragement to.
- Reproduce; re-enact.
- Give new life or energy to.
- Engage in recreational activities rather than work; occupy oneself in a diversion.
Synonyms of "Recreate" as a verb (26 Words)
animate | Give lifelike qualities to. She has animated the government with a sense of political direction. |
cheer | Spur on or encourage especially by cheers and shouts. Everybody cheered the birthday boy. |
embolden | Give (someone) the courage or confidence to do something. Centre embolden and underline the heading. |
hearten | Make more cheerful or confident. She was heartened to observe that the effect was faintly comic. |
perform again | Carry out or perform an action. |
play | Play a role or part. Princeton plays Yale this weekend. |
quicken | (of a woman) reach a stage in pregnancy when movements of the fetus can be felt. The fetus quickened. |
reanimate | Give fresh vigour or impetus to. His personal dislike of the man was reanimated. |
reassemble | Put (something) together again. The trucks had to be reassembled on arrival. |
rebuild | Build (something) again after it has been damaged or destroyed. The house was rebuild after it was hit by a bomb. |
recondition | Condition again. He reconditioned the old appliances. |
reconstruct | Build again. A small area of painted Roman plaster has been reconstructed. |
redo | Redecorate (a room or building. The house is being redone exactly to suit his taste. |
refashion | Fashion (something) again or differently. The industry reshaped and refashioned itself. |
refurbish | Renovate and redecorate (something, especially a building. We refurbished the guest wing. |
remake | Make new. The bed would be more comfortable if it were remade. |
remodel | Do over, as of (part of) a house. She remodelled the head with careful fingers. |
renovate | Make brighter and prettier. This will renovate my spirits. |
repair | Put right (an unwelcome situation. She repaired her TV set. |
repeat | Repeat an earlier theme of a composition. She repeated what I d said. |
replicate | Make an exact copy of; reproduce. He could never replicate his brilliant performance of the magic trick. |
restore | Restore by replacing a part or putting together what is torn or broken. The week at the spa restored me. |
revamp | Provide (a shoe) with a new vamp. Revamp my old boots. |
revive | Give new strength or energy to. The cool refreshing water revived us all. |
revivify | Give new life or energy to. They revivified a wine industry that had all but vanished. |
vivify | Give new life or energy to. His remarks always vivify an otherwise dull story. |
Usage Examples of "Recreate" as a verb
- The door was now open to recreate a single German state.
- She recreated the feeling of the 1920's with her stage setting.
- He recreated Mallory's 1942 climb for TV.
- The students all recreate alike.
Associations of "Recreate" (30 Words)
alive | In operation. The happiest person alive. |
animate | Endowed with feeling and unstructured consciousness- T.E.Lawrence. The word dog is animate. |
inanimate | Appearing dead; not breathing or having no perceptible pulse. Inanimate objects. |
life | An account of the series of events making up a person s life. His heroism saved a life. |
live | Have life be alive. The nerve is alive. |
lively | Quick and energetic. Lively and attractive parents. |
reanimate | Give fresh vigour or impetus to. In the vain hope of being reanimated he left his body to science. |
recover | Get or find back recover the use of. He recovered his balance and sped on. |
refresh | Refresh one s memory. A poor screen display which relies on scrolling refresh. |
regenerate | (especially in Christian use) give a new and higher spiritual nature to. Regenerate hatred. |
reincarnation | A new version of something from the past. His reincarnation as a lion. |
rejuvenate | Restore (a river or stream) to a condition characteristic of a younger landscape. A new challenge may be just what he needs to rejuvenate his career. |
renew | Cause to appear in a new form. A change of scenery will recharge your batteries and renew your zest for life. |
renovate | Refresh; reinvigorate. This will renovate my spirits. |
restore | Restore by replacing a part or putting together what is torn or broken. The effort to restore him to office isn t working. |
resurface | Appear again. I helped my mother to resurface the kitchen floor. |
resurge | A further or fresh surge; a surge back or backwards. His need for a meal resurged. |
resurgence | An increase or revival after a period of little activity, popularity, or occurrence. A resurgence of interest in religion. |
resurgent | Increasing or reviving after a period of little activity, popularity, or occurrence. Resurgent nationalism. |
resurrect | Return from the dead. He queried whether Jesus was indeed resurrected. |
resuscitate | Return to consciousness. An ambulance crew tried to resuscitate him. |
revitalization | The action of imbuing something with new life and vitality. The city has seen revitalization of its economy. |
revitalize | Restore strength. A package of spending cuts to revitalize the economy. |
revive | Cause to regain consciousness. Interest in ESP revived. |
risen | (of e.g. celestial bodies) above the horizon. The risen sun. |
verve | Vigour and spirit or enthusiasm. Kollo sings with supreme verve and flexibility. |
vim | A healthy capacity for vigorous activity. He seemed full of vim and vigor. |
vitalism | The theory that the origin and phenomena of life are dependent on a force or principle distinct from purely chemical or physical forces. |
vitality | An energetic style. The vitality of seeds. |
vivify | Make more lively or interesting; enliven. His remarks always vivify an otherwise dull story. |