rehabilitant

noun

Etymology

From rehabilitate + -ant.

  1. derived from rehabilitō
  2. learned borrowing from rehabilitātus
  3. suffixed as rehabilitant — “rehabilitate + ant

Definitions

  1. One who is being or has been rehabilitated.

    • The rehabilitator and the rehabilitant assess each other.
    • This does happen for some; for example, peer counseling experience gained as an advanced rehabilitant working with more recently admitted clients/patients has been a stepping stone toward professional training for a number of people.
    • Considering rehabilitant variants that are modifications of provisional wild innovations, geographic prevalence was wider in wild orangutans for 7 entries, roughly equal for 16 entries, and wider in rehabilitants for 20 entries.
  2. Undergoing or pertaining to rehabilitation.

    • There are no differences, on any of the twenty factors studied, between the rehabilitant and non-rehabilitant groups.
    • However, some evidence exists on spatial memory in both wild and captive apes and on delayed imitation in rehabilitant apes.
    • Recently sensory involvement in relation to pain has been studied asserting the clinical observation of pain ranging from mild to severe in the acute and rehabilitant phases.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for rehabilitant. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA