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reload
/ ːˈəʊ /
verb
- tr to place (cargo, goods, etc) back on (a ship. lorry, etc)
- to put ammunition into a firearm after having discharged it
- computing to fetch the latest updated version (of a web page or document); refresh
Example Sentences
There was also covert monitoring of the business, which revealed unrefrigerated chicken deliveries to west Wales and a van dumping waste at a tip before being reloaded with food without being cleaned.
Glasnow was eventually pulled after reloading the bases on another walk to Max Kepler.
“The only effect of California’s law on armed self-defense is the limitation that a person may fire no more than ten rounds without pausing to reload, something rarely done in self-defense.”
Our drone camera captured the same lorry being reloaded and we followed it back to Raspberry Hill Park Farm where it tipped again.
There is though anxiety in government that Trump might be tempted to just force a deal to end the conflict, then Russia could "just reload then go again", according to another source.
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