What's the difference between irrecuperable and recuperate?
Irrecuperable
Definition:
(a.) Irrecoverable.
Example Sentences:
(1) 72 cases with irrecuperable destroyed bladder received definitive high diversion: 34 Coffey, 5 Bricker, and since 1975, 33 continent ileocecal bladders using Benchekrouns' technique.
(2) Therapy consisted in individualized procedures depending on general and local conditions, and was aimed at the control of the bacterial plaque, extraction of irrecuperable teeth, removal of the dental pulp when significant polishing had to be carried out for alignment in the occluding plane, and of prosthetic parallelism in pluriradicular teeth with involvement of the furcation (II-nd and III-rd degree) where radicular amputation was necessary, hemi- or bisection.
Recuperate
Definition:
(v. i.) To recover health; to regain strength; to convalesce.
(v. t.) To recover; to regain; as, to recuperate the health or strength.
Example Sentences:
(1) This paper describes a case with symptomless enlarged submandibular glands, the bioptic findings which were suggesting the diagnosis of sialadenosis, the verification of the underlying disorder by child psychiatry, and the recuperation of the boy during puberty.
(2) The assessment of the infant's capacity to organize positive interaction experiences with a nurturing adult has led us to better understand the plasticity process which permits the neonate's recuperation form damage to the central nervous system (CNS).
(3) Recovery from muscle fatigue after exercise is known to have two beneficial effects: improved blood lactate elimination and a central nervous recuperation of the capacity for exercise.
(4) The above system has aided the parents by showing them that the child can be organized and that its health is recuperable, even after damage to the CNS or premature birth.
(5) Thus the parents can utilize their nurturing capacities in their relationship with the child to bring about the best recuperation possible.
(6) The same results were obtained before day 21 after MPTP in a parkinsonian monkey that did not recuperate.
(7) Informing the parents in question of our observations and approach in order to improve the child's behaviour has resulted in gained confidence and cooperation, and therefore optimum recuperation.
(8) Recuperation of the initial structure is definitively obtained during the 2nd month.
(9) As regards the direction of the recuperation front, it was established that, at any age, the preferential orientation is caudal, with a deviation to the left in a high percentage of the 20 day to 3 month old pigs, and ventral in all individuals.
(10) There was partial restauration of the disc space in 2 cases; the last one presented signs of late collapse after early recuperation.
(11) On a personal note, Madikizela-Mandela continues: "I have been in and out of hospital since the 25th January this year, not even one phone call from Luthuli House [ANC headquarters], instead you gave an interview saying I was recuperating from an ankle operation when you did not even care what kind of an operation I had.
(12) These experiments suggested the possibility that mu-agonists might enhance cardiovascular recuperation following acute hemorrhagic shock.
(13) A government official said Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was badly burned in the attack on 3 June, was discharged in Riyadh on Saturday night and moved to a residence in the city owned by the Saudi royal family to recuperate.
(14) Yemeni officials accuse Mobley of shooting two guards, killing one, at the hospital where he was recuperating from the wound in his leg in what they say was a March 2010 escape attempt.
(15) The sample consisted of 32 mother-infant dyads: 16 having normal DQ (Group A) and 16 having a below normal DQ (Group B) according to Bailey's Test applied to infants who entered a Nutritional Recuperation Center.
(16) The long-term effect of the recuperating stay lasts for 9 months.
(17) This paper reports a case of left hemidiaphragmatic paralysis in an instructor pilot and his later recuperation.
(18) Spontaneous recuperation with less frequent episodes in adolescence is common, and complications are rare, so that we consider symptomatic treatment appropriate, reserving surgical treatment for complicated cases.
(19) Nevertheless, this surgery, while not devoid of complications, permits important functional recuperation in a good number of cases (71.2%).
(20) This seems to be due to powerful adaptive mechanisms in the regulation of deposition and dissociation of excessive amounts of active serotonin as well as to the morpho-functional recuperation in the transcapillary exchange.