rehouse

IPA: rhaʊs

verb

  • (transitive) To give a new house to; to relocate someone to a new house.
  • (transitive) To store in a new location.
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Examples of "rehouse" in Sentences

  • She was the four rehouse girl, which is quite a big deal.
  • In 1983 the clock and chimes were rehoused in the current clock tower.
  • The area was not just given over to slums to rehouse the lower classes.
  • They are advertising government plans to rehouse the 1.3 million people who live in the Khayelitsha township.
  • The Filipino government claims it would cost about a third of the national budget to rehouse Manila's slum dwellers.
  • Sérgio Cabral promised in 2007 to rehouse 15,000 people living in risky areas, but has managed to relocate only about 750 thus far.
  • The Act also provides for $2 billion in new Neighborhood Stabilization Funds to help maintain ailing neighborhoods and $1.5 billion in Homelessness Prevention Funds to keep people in their homes or rapidly rehouse them;
  • But HUD Assistant Secretary Mercedes Marquez says something else wasn't reflected, and that's the impact of $1.5 billion Congress approved last year to help prevent families from becoming homeless and to quickly rehouse those who do.
  • Eventually when another club in Brisbane was created the Nomads Golf Club of Australia name and internet domain was rehoused from the original Nomads Sydney club to the Australian National body that oversees the running of all Nomads club's in Australia.

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synonyms for rehouse
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