| 1. | to bring (uncultivated areas or wasteland) into a condition for cultivation or other use. |
| 2. | to recover (substances) in a pure or usable form from refuse, discarded articles, etc. |
| 3. | to bring back to a preferable manner of living, sound principles, ideas, etc. |
| 4. | to tame. |
| 5. | re-claim. |
| 6. | to protest; object. |
| 7. | reclamation: beyond reclaim. |
re·claim (rĭ-klām') tr.v. re·claimed, re·claim·ing, re·claims
[Middle English reclamen, to call back, from Old French reclamer, to entreat, from Latin reclāmāre : re-, re- + clāmāre, to cry out; see kelə-2 in Indo-European roots.] re·claim'a·ble adj., re·claim'ant, re·claim'er n. |