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Example sentences for "rebuilt"

Lexicographically close words:
rebuffs; rebuild; rebuilding; rebuildings; rebuilds; rebuke; rebuked; rebukes; rebuketh; rebuking
  1. The burned stable had been rebuilt during our absence.

  2. Within, as well as without, the rebuilt storehouse was transformed.

  3. He did much for the beautifying of the cathedral, and rebuilt Paul's Cross, as we have said already.

  4. Charles, in spite of his troubles, either rebuilt or added eighteen vessels to the Royal Navy, leaving it not merely numerically stronger, but improved in all other particulars.

  5. It was rebuilt at its present site, its projector judging that the added descent of the rapids would so break up the ice as to eliminate any danger to the structure; and the results proved his theory true.

  6. It is now being rebuilt and greatly enlarged.

  7. It was almost completely destroyed by Tatar hordes in 1241, but was rebuilt and fortified by King Bela IV.

  8. It was begun in the 12th century, but the nave was rebuilt in the 13th in the Gothic style.

  9. He rebuilt in the Renaissance style Schloss Esterhazy, the splendour of which won for it the name of the Hungarian Versailles.

  10. It fell before the Danes, but was rebuilt by Earl Leofric and his wife Godiva.

  11. At the latter place there was a barrack, afterwards rebuilt by the Duke of Kent about 1800.

  12. Haliburton's corner was also rebuilt of brick, and the buildings on Hollis street, the property of Mr. LeNoir and others, were built about the same time by the late Judge William Hill and his brother T.

  13. Mr. Grassie rebuilt with brick and stone, and afterwards lined the shutters of his new store with sheet iron.

  14. The block was soon rebuilt with a better description of buildings.

  15. It was to be rebuilt on a scale out-Ritzing the Ritz; but in the mean while it was not quite the Ritz.

  16. The latter portion was so completely destroyed that it had to be rebuilt in some places, while at the southern end an equal amount of repair work was necessary.

  17. A support was constructed under this hanging wall, and to give additional strength the foundations were rebuilt a little broader at the base than formerly, causing the wall to bulge almost imperceptibly into the kiva.

  18. This city, which had recently been burned down, he rebuilt with great care, and came thereby into frequent contact with the ancient enemy of his race, Bishop Nicholas.

  19. Part of Buckland Abbey, which had been converted into a dwelling-house in Henry VIII's time, was bought and rebuilt by Sir Francis Drake.

  20. So many Devonshire churches, as already remarked, were rebuilt in Tudor times that the majority of the ecclesiastical buildings in the county appear to belong to the Perpendicular period.

  21. A Justice of Assize writes about the same time from the western counties to the effect that twenty-six houses of husbandry have been rebuilt and the offenders punished.

  22. It was then on its present site, but the end of the Cena block was rebuilt some twenty years ago.

  23. But this chapel, which was near the present Transfiguration Chapel, was destroyed and rebuilt on its present site after his death, as also the Cena Chapel, which originally contained frescoes by Bernardino Lanini.

  24. Under his auspices several "stars" appeared on the boards of the Marylebone theatre, and later he became manager of the newly rebuilt Olympic at Wych Street.

  25. After a while, the rest of the inhabitants returned, and the squares and temples were rebuilt by the munificence of the burghers and under Vespasian's direct patronage.

  26. Nay, they are dumb inanimate things that may fall to pieces and be rebuilt at pleasure.

  27. After an interval of four hundred and fifteen years, in the consulship of Lucius Scipio and Caius Norbanus,[196] it was burnt and rebuilt on the same site.

  28. In his time Aldred rebuilt the monastery on new foundations.

  29. King Edward's gate--is of the same date, having been rebuilt by Osborne the cellarer.

  30. The simple fact is that the Norman prelates pulled down and rebuilt the English churches, mainly because they thought them too small.

  31. The tracery of the windows in the clerestory is ascribed to Abbot Morwent, who rebuilt the west front.

  32. Peter, who resided here and rebuilt the castle.

  33. A gigantic yew formerly grew in the central enclosure, and overshadowed it with its spreading branches; but the parish church has been taken down and rebuilt in another part of the village, and the yew-tree has disappeared.

  34. Elven was rebuilt by him with the materials of the old; but they were all dismantled by the orders of the Duchess Anne in 1496, to punish her guardian for his revolt.

  35. It is now the property of the Sœurs de la Miséricorde, who have rebuilt the fine Abbey church according to its former model.

  36. That emperor rebuilt Florence, but experienced some difficulty in doing so, by reason of the statue of Mars, which had been thrown into the Arno.

  37. They rebuilt the bastions and waged constant warfare against the encroaching lake.

  38. The first house rebuilt here after the burning was that of Mrs. Mary Atkins, a young widow, whose husband, Lieut.

  39. The chancel, rebuilt in 1633, has a little painted glass in its eastern window; and the Norman font and richly carved Jacobean pulpit are worth a passing glance.

  40. Close at hand, its only neighbour, appears the parish church, a curious little whitewashed edifice, destroyed and rebuilt at the time of the Great Rebellion, when Benthall was held for the King.

  41. Stokesay Church, though originally Norman, was in large measure rebuilt in the seventeenth century, as recorded upon the keystone of the tower arch, 'Ano.

  42. It was rebuilt again in great magnificence, with painted ceilings, according to the taste of the time, and Lord Montague, then Duke of Montague, died in it in 1709.

  43. In St. Andrew's Street are the Rectory and Court-house, rebuilt from the designs of S.

  44. The church was rebuilt by Wren in 1686 "in a neat, plain manner.

  45. On the north side are the arms of Sir Thomas Lovell, who was a bencher of the Inn, and who rebuilt the gate in 1518.

  46. This second church did not last very long, for in Queen Anne's reign the parishioners petitioned that it should be rebuilt as one of the fifty new churches, being then in a state of decay.

  47. The street takes its name from Furnival's Inn, rebuilt in the early part of the nineteenth century.

  48. On the south side is the Italian Hospital, lately rebuilt on a fine scale.

  49. It was rebuilt in great part in Charles I.

  50. Light squadrons of the enemy were seen hovering about the plain, but never approached near enough to discover the deception; and thus in the course of a few days the wall was rebuilt stronger than before.

  51. The edifices which had been demolished by the late floods were rebuilt in a firmer manner, and precautions were taken to protect the camp from future inundations.

  52. The peril he regarded as a judgment from heaven; and, as an expiation for his folly, he rebuilt the monastery.

  53. The choir and extremities of the transept, all of pointed architecture, are supposed to have been rebuilt in 1278.

  54. Lemont afterwards bought the castle, and the town was rebuilt in the early part of the 19th century according to his plans.

  55. In 1750 the abbey buildings were largely rebuilt and now contain a technical school.

  56. It is the last house on the right under the arcade, and is easily distinguished by two medallions in stone, preserved on the façade, though it has been several times rebuilt during the space of six hundred years.

  57. It was formerly of wood: but having been frequently destroyed, it was rebuilt with stone in 1618, and covered on both sides with houses.


  58. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "rebuilt" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    better; changeable; changed; converted; degenerate; divergent; improved; modified; mutant; qualified; rebuilt; reformed; renewed; revived; revolutionary; subversive; transformed; transmuted; unmitigated; worse