Refill \Re*fill"\ (r?*f?l"), v. t. & i. To fill, or become full, again.
At least two days is required to drain more than a half-million gallons of fuel from the shuttle tank and to refill them.
Yes, the catfish are an awfully good smoking gun." Hoke said he would refill the pond outside the main entrance to Interior Department headquarters and set an underwater trap for the catfish as soon as possible.
Late last year, P&G cautiously began testing refill pouches for liquid household products in Washington, D.C., and Baltimore.
"It's doing phenomenally well," she said. "We have to continuously refill the display.
Otherwise, she wrote, FMC would be "allowed to shift corporate assets from the left pocket to the right pocket, and then to refill the left pocket by recovery from the defendants."
Every few seconds, the compressor started to refill the suspension's air reservoir with a heavy breathing noise like an elephant making an indecent telephone call.
It also charged that Kodak failed to pay royalties to VideoTours clients, many of whom are non-profit institutions, monitor on-site sales, refill inventories and maintain displays with zoos, aquariums and museums where the tapes are sold.
"Just a splash," coos Ms. Marchand as she holds out her martini glass for a refill.
George Bush and Michael Dukakis both have large cash reserves to protect their delegate leads as their rival presidential hopefuls must refill campaign coffers depleted by the Super Tuesday marathon.
But men who return for a refill of a product they received as a gift may be stunned by prices as high as $17.50 for a small tube of moisturizer.
Feroze Begum, a diabetic, said she traveled more than 12 miles "in the hot sun to get a refill of my prescription, but there is no doctor to authorize it" at the Ram Manohar Lohia hospital.