| recyclable | Although many materials are potentially recyclable, for some there does not exist a viable market to reuse the material The end result, then, is the same as for an intrinsically non-recyclable material, the product is landfilled or incinerated For the purposes of these questions, a recyclable material will be one that can be reprocessed for use and one for which an active market exists to use the reprocessed material See Additional Resources for more information on determining active markets | en |
| recyclable | capable of being recycled, can be reprocessed for reuse sıfat | en |
| recyclable | Recyclable waste or materials can be processed and used again. a separate bin for recyclable waste products. used materials or substances that are recyclable can be recycled | en |
| recyclable | any material or group of materials that can be collected and sold for recycling at a net cost, equal to or less than, the cost of collection and disposal of the same material | en |
| recyclable | A product or packaging which can be collected, re-processed and resold as a new product (e g in NZ - glass, aluminium, paper, and some plastics) | en |
| recyclable | An object that can be recycled, such as a soda can | en |
| recyclable | Able to be recycled | en |
| recyclable | capable of being recycled | en |
| recyclable | Packaging materials that may be processed for reuse by a series of changes or treatments, but not necessarily for their original use | en |
| recyclable | a product that can be recycled by a commonly available industrial process; by practical definition, products can be recycled only where facilities exist to handle them Usually designated by the "chasing arrows" on packaging | en |
| recyclable | possible to use again | en |
| recyclable | Refers to such products as paper, glass, plastic, used oil, and metals that can be reprocessed instead of being disposed of as waste | en |
| recycle | Systems which may be run by private enterprise or local government to gather recyclable materials and remake them into similar or dissimilar products for market Common examples are newspapers, glass, plastic, steel, and aluminum | en |
| recycle | cause to repeat a cycle | en |
| recycle | use again after processing; "We must recycle the cardboard boxes" | en |
| recycle | reprocess waste to recover reusable material fiil | en |
| recycle | If you recycle things that have already been used, such as bottles or sheets of paper, you process them so that they can be used again. The objective would be to recycle 98 per cent of domestic waste It is printed on recycled paper. + recycling re·cy·cling a recycling scheme | en |
| recyclables | plural of recyclable | en |
| recycle | Recycle using proper procedures | en |
| recycle | A volume whose data has passed both its browse and retention policies and is available for relabeling | en |
| recycle | When a bird either losses or has the first clutch of eggs removed and lays a second clutch | en |
| recycle | Prepare items and bring in for recycling | en |
| recycle | To process in order to use again | en |
| recycle | use again | en |
| recycle | To break down and reuse component materials (recycled paper, recycled plastic) | en |
| recycle | To reused the remaining uranium and plutonium found in spent fuel after they have been separated at a reprocessing plant from unwanted radioactive waste products also in the spent fuel | en |
| recycle | To reuse as a whole | en |
| recycle | (v) to reuse or to adapt to a new use | en |
| recycle | to recycle is to put into the cycle again In other words, to take a product and reuse it when discarded Recycling saves enormous amounts of energy and raw materials | en |
| recycle | to use more than once | en |
| recycle | 1 In a countdown to stop the count and to return to an earlier point in the countdown, as in we have recycled, now at T minus 80 and counting Compare hold | en |
| recycle | collecting and reprocessing already manufactured materials for remanufacture either as the same thing or as part of a different product (Taking a plastic bottle and turning it into a park bench or another bottle) | en |
| recycle | To use again, especially to reprocess so as to use again To recondition and adapt to a new use or function | en |
| recycle | To make new products from old ones Recycling used items, such as paper, cans, or bottles, saves energy, produces less pollution, and uses up fewer natural resources | en |
| recycle | A multi-phased process which includes removal, separation and/or diversion of materials from the waste stream and their use as raw materials in the manufacturing process; for example, recycled wastepaper utilized by the paper industry | en |
| recycle | To reclaim or reuse old materials in order to make new products | en |
| recycle | To reuse an item instead of just throwing it away For example, soda cans can be recycled to make new soda cans | en |
| recycle | (1) to put or pass through a cycle again, as for further treatment; (2) to extract and reuse useful materials from garbage, waste, or the like | en |
| recycle | To extract and reuse useful materials found in waste | en |
| recycle | To collect and treat a resource so it can be used again | en |
| recycle | To separate a given material from waste and process it so that it can be used again in a form similar to its original use; for example, newspapers recycled into newspapers or cardboard | en |
| recycle | The process by which materials are collected, reprocessed or remanufactured, and reused | en |
| recycle | To process waste materials in order to regain new material for human use | en |
| recycle | Make a NetWorker backup volume available for relabeling and new data because the data on the volume has passed both its browse and retention policies | en |