Citations:reparate

Etymology 1: adjectival sense

 * circa 1425: John Arderne, Treatises of Fistula in Ano (Sloane 6), page? 84 (printed in 1910 by the Early English Text Society)
 * Þe place noȝt reparate..I continued euer-more þis cure..vnto þat al þe mortified flesch within was fully putte out.
 * 1510–8: Dominic Mancini [aut.] and Alexander Barclay [tr.], The Mirrour of Good Manners, sig. Eiiiv
 * This lyfe is resemblyd, [to] a byldynge ruynous Nowe shakyd with the wynde, agayne: now reparate.
 * 1902: Edward N. Eaton [ed.], Second Annual Report of the State Food Commissioner of Illinois, page 42
 * Cream vat room reparate, lined and ceiled with matched pine boards recently painted; good condition except wood floor which is fair; cream vat is elevated five feet from the floor; good condition.

Etymology 1: verb sense of “repair”

 * 1548: H. Bullinger [aut.] and John Veron [tr.], Fiftie Godlie…Sermons Diuided into Fiue Decades, “Holsome Antidotus”, sig. Aviii
 * Celestyall Ierusalem (whiche is now almost buyldyd vp agayn, and through reparated, by our godly Nehemias).
 * 1656: C. Irvine, Medicina Magnetica, volume I, page 3
 * This spirit is reparated as much as may be.
 * 1900: Transactions and Proceedings of the Botanical Society of Edinburgh, volume 21, page 284
 * It was very sorrowful to see the eldest church in the valley destroyed, but I hope it will soon be reparated.
 * 1905, August: Dental Protective Association of the United States, Dental Digest, volume 11, page 779 (Oral Hygiene Division of the Petroleum Publishing Co.)
 * Files in great variety of shape and thickness were freely employed for reparating and dressing the teeth.
 * 1922: Daily Mail, 13th of December issue, page 8
 * Why has Germany been allowed to reparate herself in so thorough and handsome a manner?
 * 1987: Folker H. Wittmann [ed.], Seismic Response Analysis of Nuclear Power Plant Systems: Transactions of the 9th International Conference on Structural Mechanics in Reactor Technology, page 259 (Taylor & Francis ; ISBN 9789061917625
 * The advantage of such an arrangement is to limit the impact of an incident or even of a sodium-water reaction : it is possible to reparate, remove or replace a defective module without having to shut down the relevant secondary loop completely for the whole duration of the servicing operation.

intransitive uses

 * 1902: Catholic World, volume 74, page 245 (Paulist Fathers)
 * “Though inland far we be, Our souls have sight of that Immortal sea which brought us hither,” and we re-echo this prayer for saints — saints to reparate, saints to impetrate for the world, for poor France, and for Holy Church in the evil times upon which she has fallen!
 * 1916: Report of the Public Utilities Commission of the State of Idaho, volumes 3–5, page 189 (Capital News Pub. Co.)
 * Company declined to reparate, alleg- […]
 * 1921: Ellsworth Nichols and Henry Clifford Spurr, Public Utilities Reports, volume 1,927, part 2, page 806 (Lawyers Cooperative Pub. Co.)
 * [8] It is clear that this case falls within the rule of the supreme court of Illinois laid down in the above case and no “substantial wrong can result” if the Commission at this time issues a preliminary order permitting increases above set forth and protecting the consumers by the provision of a reparation clause, with interest, requiring the company to reparate if upon final investigation rates hereinafter authorized are found to be excessive.
 * 1930: Nebraska State Railway Commission, Annual Report, page 137
 * I don’t understand how we could on one breath say, we want to reparate and in the next say, we don’t want to.
 * 1931: Decisions of the Railroad Commission of the State of California, volume 35, page 650 (Superintendent of State Printing)
 * Defendants did not oppose the inclusion of these cars in this proceeding, and were willing to reparate to the basis of the proposed rates.
 * 1948: Traffic Service Corporation, QA: Traffic World’s Questions & Answers, volume 18, page 79 (self-published)
 * Of course, if the carriers are not willing to reparate, your only remedy is to file a formal complaint, alleging unreasonableness, which complaint must be supported by proof of the unreasonableness of the undercharges sought to be collected.
 * 1950: American Short Line Railroad Association, Proceedings of [the] Annual Meeting, volume 37, page 150 (self-published)
 * In this connection, the carriers voluntarily agreed to reparate where the amount of the interim increase granted was greater than the amount sought in the Ex Parte 168 petition.
 * 1953: Traffic Service Corporation, Traffic World, volume 91, page 46 (self-published)
 * With respect to certain reparation requests, the examiner said that inasmuch as the railroads had agreed to reparate to the basis prescribed on packing house products in the case of Armour & Co. v. Ahnapee & W. Ry. Co., 272 I.C.C. 759, […]
 * 1975: West’s Annotated California Codes, volume 57, page 402 (West Publishing Company)
 * The filing of a voluntary and informal request by a railroad to reparate does not operate to extend the two-year statute of limitations under this section.

transitive uses in the sense “make reparation for ”

 * 1919: The China Monthly Review, volume 11, page 393 (J.W. Powell?)
 * The sequence to the determined action of the guilds in notifying the Japanese dealers that they will take no deliveries of orders and wish all business relations cut until the Tsingtao and Foochow infringements of sovereignty are reparated has been that the Japanese dealers, with their usual faith that their government will back them up, have appealed to Consul-General Funatsu, who fought their battle (although a losing one) with such fervor in the case of the president of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce.
 * 1971: United States Department of Transportation, Motor Vehicle Crash Losses and Their Compensation in the United States: A Report to the Congress and the President, volume 1, page 128 (United States Government Printing Office)
 * Weighing all the advantages and disadvantages of of the various choices available, the main outlines or principles of a better compensation system can be identified: a system that would be more efficient, offer greater flexibility and personal choice, be fairer, give greater incentives to loss reduction and do a better job, overall, of reparating victims’ losses.
 * 1994: Margaret Cormack and Peter Godfrey Foote, Subsidia Hagiographica, volume 78, “The Saints in Iceland: Their Veneration from the Conversion to 1400”, page 162 (Société des Bollandistes; ISBN 2873650060, 9782873650063)
 * Sickness could strike either those who committed the sins in question, or, by mystical substitution, voluntary or not, innocents who would thus reparate the […]
 * 2007: S.A. Khan, Rights of the Victims: Reparation by International Criminal Court, page 52
 * The study establishes that giving a proper definition of victim will reparate the harm suffered by not only natural parson but also the diverse welfare institutions including religious institutions.

transitive uses in the sense “make reparation to ”

 * 1956: Price-support Program: Hearings Before the Committee on Agriculture and Forestry, United States Senate, Eighty-fourth Congress, part 3, page 1,513 (United States Government Printing Office)
 * The Government must now admit their series of near fatal errors, and set about, at once, to reparate and redress the American farmer for misleading and misguiding him.
 * 1977: Barry R. Gross [ed.], Reverse Discrimination, page 387 (Prometheus Books)
 * By the same token, it does not compensate or “reparate” all minority persons equally but merely those applying for admission, jobs, promotions, and so forth.
 * 1981: United States District Court Southern District New York, 10th of December (LexisNexis)
 * Decisions regarding what portions of the blocked assets will eventually be used in a possible claims program to reparate American citizens.
 * 1998: Peggy Phelan and Jill Lane [eds.], The Ends of Performance, essay twelve (pages 186–196): Randy Martin, “Staging Crisis: Twin Tales in Moving Politics”, page 191
 * The United States lost the nation in Vietnam, and the abandonment of developing the former was no less complete than the un-nationly refusal to reparate the latter.
 * 2009: Brandon Hamber, Transforming Societies After Political Violence: Truth, Reconciliation, and Mental Health, page 29 (Springer ; ISBN 9780387894263
 * The R&R Committee was obligated to make recommendations to “reparate” these victims for the damages they had undergone in the conflicts of the past.

erroneous uses for separate

 * 1895: Acts and Resolutions Adopted by the Legislature of Florida, page 338 (W. & C. Julian Bartlett)
 * Sec. 50. It shall be the duty of the mayor and the council, in their annual levy of taxes, to set aside such sum as in their judgment, shall be necessary and advisable, and the amount so set aside shall be carried to the credit of the said executive boards when collected respectively, and shall not be diverted from said boards, or used by the mayor and council for any other purpose: but the same shall remain as a reparate fund in the hand of the treasurer of the city.
 * 1921: Iron Molders’ Union of North America and International Molders’ Union of North America, International Molders’ and Foundry Workers’ Journal, volume 57, page 273
 * The reason a thin casting requires a high silicon content and a comparatively small amount of scrap, is that it cools so quickly that unless the change in carbon is materially aided and hastened by a fairly high silicon content, the casting will become rigid before the carbon has had a chance to reparate out as graphite.
 * 1998: A. B. Gajendragadkar, The Arthasaṁgraha of Laugākṣī Bhāskara, page xvi (Motilal Banarsidass Publ. )
 * Since Kumārilabhaṭṭa recognises abhāva as a separate category, he recognises anupalabdhi as a reparate means of knowledge for knowing abhāva, while Prabhākara considers abhāva as the adhikaraṇasvarūpa i.e. of the form of the location itself, and hence does not accept anuplabdhi as a separate means of knowledge.