From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishreconstitutere‧con‧sti‧tute /riːˈkɒnstɪtjuːt $ riːˈkɑːnstɪtuːt/ verb [transitive] 1 START TO HAPPEN, EXIST ETCto form an organization or a group again in a different way The committees will be reconstituted after the election.reconstitute something as something In 1832 the firm was reconstituted as Mills and Co.2 to change dried food back to its original form by adding water to it reconstituted milk —reconstitution /ˌriːkɒnstɪˈtjuːʃən $ -kɑːnstɪˈtuː-/ noun [uncountable]→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
reconstitute• Perhaps vision can never be recaptured or reconstituted.• Dried whole milk is used mainly in infant feeding, but it can be reconstituted and used as fresh fluid milk.• The parliament has been reconstituted, but is essentially powerless.• The earthly family was divinely instituted, and devout families believed that it would be reconstituted in heaven.• Sun-dried cherries and cranberries should be reconstituted in liquid before using.• reconstituted orange juice• In this case we must reconstitute ourselves into a court of appeal and go through all the evidence afresh.• His photographs of these installations reconstitute the memory of a place.• Meanwhile, the Commission had been reconstituted under David Donnison and addressed the question of the direct-grant and independent day-schools.