How to Use rewilding in a Sentence

rewilding

noun
  • It is set to be Africa's largest rewilding programs of any species, set to take place over the next 10 years.
    Emma Ogao, ABC News, 23 Sep. 2023
  • The bike boom of the pandemic, Rosen argues, was a lot like the worldwide rewilding.
    The New Yorker, 23 May 2022
  • This project is part of Affric Highlands, the UK's largest rewilding project.
    Elizabeth Waddington, Treehugger, 16 Apr. 2023
  • The Ramsays brought Scotland’s first recent-era beavers to the site in 2002, when there were fewer restrictions, as part of their own beaver rewilding project.
    BostonGlobe.com, 5 Sep. 2021
  • That vision is beginning to be realized in major cities around the world in the shape of the urban rewilding movement.
    Kieron Monks, CNN, 22 Nov. 2022
  • If that wasn’t fraught enough, the rewilding process will take hundreds of years, so Syd manages their little chunk of greenery between extremely long naps in a cryogenic pod.
    Geoffrey Bunting, Wired, 5 Feb. 2022
  • Given the demands of rewilding, even Heck cattle are gaining new respect.
    Jonathon Keats, Discover Magazine, 19 June 2017
  • An adventure film that takes us on a bumpy journey to the Siberian steppes, where a Russian geophysicist wants to restore the ecosystems of the Ice Age through radical rewilding.
    Leo Barraclough, Variety, 22 Feb. 2022
  • Oostvaardersplassen is the world’s largest and most advanced exercise in rewilding, but others could soon follow.
    Andrew Curry, Discover Magazine, 4 May 2010
  • Then, the owners decided on a new approach: rewilding, allowing the land to return to its natural state.
    David Morgan, CBS News, 19 July 2023
  • Some in the rewilding and broader conservation movements have tried to make the case that recovering the landscape can be seen as an element of its defense.
    Johanna Chisholm, WIRED, 23 July 2023
  • Sustainability and gardening can go hand in hand—and rewilding proves it.
    Sophia Beams, Better Homes & Gardens, 27 Sep. 2023
  • This rewilding project involves the collaboration of 76 working partners from 15 countries and is the first time a captive shark species has been successfully bred with the goal of reintroduction to the wild.
    Cnt Editors, Condé Nast Traveler, 21 Sep. 2023
  • Fences were removed along with the livestock, and the rewilding effort began literally at grassroots level.
    CNN, 27 Jan. 2022
  • Now, after more than a 50-year absence, conservation scientists are calling for the jaguar’s return to their native habitat in a study that outlines what the rewilding effort may look like.
    Elizabeth Gamillo, Smithsonian Magazine, 20 May 2021
  • But the surfers face steep challenges on a coastline where conservation and rewilding can provoke suspicion and anxiety.
    WIRED, 22 July 2023
  • The farmers may be despondent, but Marris describes this rewilding conflict with passion.
    Carolyn Wells, Longreads, 13 Sep. 2023
  • Fear and suspicion of rewilding are fueled in part by the painful history, but an exact recurrence is unlikely, Davidson says.
    Cathleen O'Grady, The Atlantic, 20 May 2022
  • Funds are being raised for Wilder Blean, all of which will go toward rewilding — a conservation effort intended to replenish land and restore it to its natural state.
    Sydney Page, Washington Post, 27 Oct. 2022
  • The last pillar, Give, offers guests to give back to local communities such as local ski clubs or dedicated rewilding projects in the Engadin to protect the natural landscape.
    Rana Good, Forbes, 23 Feb. 2023
  • The railway passes through habitats from grassland to mangroves, and ecologists hope the rewilding will connect flora and fauna and promote greater species diversity.
    Nick Roll, The Christian Science Monitor, 28 Mar. 2023
  • One key focus for this project is definitely community, as well as rewilding.
    Elizabeth Waddington, Treehugger, 16 Apr. 2023
  • Wildlife has blossomed in this stretch of seemingly uninhabitable desert, Tsaobeb told me, after a decades-long rewilding effort to convert what was once farmland back into wilderness.
    Melanie Van Zyl, Travel + Leisure, 5 July 2021
  • The rewilding effort has been credited with helping to reinvigorate tourism in northern Scotland.
    James Hookway, WSJ, 22 Jan. 2022
  • Many businesses are supporting words with action through tree-planting and rewilding projects that aim to restore natural ecosystems and natural habitats.
    Jason Knights, Fortune, 7 Dec. 2022
  • Funding for rewilding projects can help turn the tide against the global decline and disappearance of these large and environmentally influential plant consumers.
    Curtis Abraham, Scientific American, 9 Sep. 2023
  • As in Los Angeles, which is moving forward with the rehabilitation of its eponymous river, rewilding projects are poised to supplant the concrete jungle with actual jungle.
    Ian Volner, ELLE Decor, 21 Oct. 2020
  • Intent on making the farm a greener, cleaner space for her young children, Bamford also set about planting wildflower meadows and reinstalling hedgerows, now-typical methods of rewilding that were unfashionable at the time.
    New York Times, 28 July 2021
  • But rewilding also happens in some of the world’s biggest urban centers, as people find mutually beneficial ways to coexist with nature.
    John Flesher, The Christian Science Monitor, 7 Dec. 2022
  • But rewilding also happens in some of the world's biggest urban centers, as people find mutually beneficial ways to coexist with nature.
    Arkansas Online, 11 Dec. 2022

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'rewilding.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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