Definition of "reconvert"
reconvert
verb
third-person singular simple present reconverts, present participle reconverting, simple past and past participle reconverted
(transitive, intransitive) To convert again, convert back.
Quotations
Now it could not be expected that so much sea being converted into land by this Judgement by two years labour, and but finished and brought to pass in the 6th year of Henry the Sixth, the same land should be in the very next year, viz. in the 7th year of the same Kings Reign reconverted into sea.
1664, John Exton, chapter 8, in The Maritime Dicæologie, or Sea Jurisdiction of England, London, page 96
Quotations
This epiſtle dyd ſaynt Peter wryte to the Hethen that we reconuerted ⁊ exhorteth thẽ to ſtonde faſt in the fayth […]
1534 November, Willyam Tindale [i.e., William Tyndale], transl., “A Prologe to the Fyrst Epistle of Saynt Peter”, in The Newe Testament […] (Tyndale Bible), Antwerp: […] Marten Emperowr, folio cccxiiii, verso
With no regular ammunition supply, they relied on whatever they could capture on raids. When it did not match their miscellaneous firearms, they were ingenious at reconverting the ammo to the weapon.
1963, Margaret Bourke-White, chapter 28, in Portrait of Myself, New York: Simon and Schuster, page 338
noun
plural reconverts
A person who has been reconverted.
Quotations
[…] it is notorious, that of those professing the creed of naked Protestantism, she [the Church of Rome] has made […] converts and reconverts by thousands—nay, even by millions:
1843, William Ewart Gladstone, “Present Aspect of the Church”, in Gleanings of Past Years, volume 5, London: John Murray, published 1879, pages 33–34