These ions will recombine and neutralize their charges if the opportunity is given.
I can do no more than give the features; the reader must recombine them in his own mind.
Since our task is to discover their connections and to recombine them, for us at the time they are partial.
In any of these cases families once widely dispersed are not likely again to recombine.
It seems needless to repeat or recombine them; but in one relation they have scarcely been handled with any direct purpose.
The atoms may recombine, or join with others, but never form anew that same man.
It creates nothing, but it may enlarge, diminish or recombine ideas with an infinity of form.
The atoms are thus enabled to recombine, and when they do so they restore the precise amount of heat consumed in their separation.
It is the sun that separates the carbon from the oxygen of the carbonic acid, and thus enables them to recombine.
Whether they recombine in the furnace of the steam-engine or in the animal body, the origin of the power they produce is the same.
"machine that cuts, threshes and cleans grain" (short for combine harvester), 1857, from combine (v.).
recombine re·com·bine (rē'kəm-bīn')
v. re·com·bined, re·com·bin·ing, re·com·bines
To undergo or cause genetic recombination; form new combinations.