Look up regeneration in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Regeneration or regenerative may refer to: Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Wiktionary is a multilingual, Web-based project to create a free content dictionary, available in over 150 languages. ...
Regeneration (biology), the ability to recreate lost or damaged tissues, organs and limbs
In literature: Bush regeneration is an ecological technique practiced in Australia to restore remnant bushland ecological communities that have been invaded by weeds. ... Regeneration is a form of tissue repair; the restoration of lost or damaged tissues, organs or limbs. ...
In music: Regeneration is a prize-winning novel by Pat Barker, first published in 1991. ... This is a list of books and monographs by American geneticist Thomas Hunt Morgan. ...
In technology: Regeneration is a music album by Roy Orbison released in 1977 that marked the return to Monument Records where Orbison had launched his greatest successes more than fifteen years earlier. ... Regeneration is the seventh studio album by The Divine Comedy - and their first for Parlophone/EMI - on March 12, 2001. ... Regeneration is Christian rock band Superchicks fourth studio album and their first remix album. ...
In other fields: In laser science, regenerative amplification is a process used to generate short but strong pulses of laser light. ... A regenerative brake is an apparatus, a device or system which allows a vehicle to recapture and store part of the kinetic energy that would otherwise be lost to heat when braking. ... Regenerative capacitor memory is a type of computer memory that uses the electrical property of capacitance to store the data. ... The regenerative circuit (or self-regenerative circuit) allows a signal to be amplified many times by the same vacuum tube or other active component such as a field effect transistor. ... Regenerative cooling in rockets is where the propellant is passed through tubes around the combustion chamber or nozzle as the fuel is a good conductor of heat. ... A desiccant is a substance that adsorbs moisture from the air. ... A molecular sieve is a material containing tiny pores of a precise and uniform size that is used as an adsorbent for gases and liquids. ...
Evil Dead: Regeneration, a video game for the PlayStation 2 and Xbox video game consoles
Hydrochloric acid regeneration, a chemical process for the reclamation of HCl from metal chloride solutions as hydrochloric acid
Presumptive regeneration, the idea that parents should baptize their children based on a presumption of the child's being regenerate
Rengeneration, a biological ability exhibited by the Time Lords in the fictional context of Doctor Who
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In Christian theology, regeneration is the process by which men are given new hearts; that is, the process by which they are "born again", experiencing a "new birth".
In inner-city development, regeneration or renewal is the improving of a poor or run-down area by a programme of investment in areas such as infrastructure or housing.
Regeneration is also the name of an episode of Star Trek: Enterprise which focused on this aspect of the Borg.
Regeneration is the ability to restore lost or damaged tissues, organs or limbs.
Children under 6 years of age are capable of regenerating lost fingertips and the human liver retains its ability to regenerate throughout a person's lifetime.
Regeneration of a lost limb occurs in two major steps, first de-differentiation of adult cells into a stem cell state similar to embryonic cells and second, development of these cells into new tissue more or less the same way it developed the first time.