Dictionary
recommission
verb
To give a new commission or to validate an existing commission.
Exact(8)
Though local electricity engineers were hopeful of restoring the supply of power to Gaza's prewar levels of six to 10 hours a day in some areas, it may take years to recommission the only power station, which was destroyed on 29 July.
No further details of the recommission were given, nor was there any indication whether these next 13+ episodes will be the last as many have speculated.
The early recommission shows that the network clearly has confidence in the spin-off, even if creator Vince Gilligan doesn't.
The BBC recently decided not to recommission Young Apprentice, a teenage version of Lord Sugar's competition to find his next employee (or in this year's case to invest £250,000 in a new business venture).
Ms. Johnson-Miller said the decision of whether to scrap or recommission an airliner was both a safety and financial one.
"We didn't anticipate having to recommission it," Mr. Prendergast said.
Netflix chief executive Reed Hastings told the Guardian last month that the streaming service "would be dumb" not to recommission the show, which was the US watercooler hit of the summer.
Legal experts said that the network may not decide to recommission the show following this series.
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