refresh

/rɪˈfrɛʃ/
verbIntermediate
general

to restore energy, strength, or vitality

A cold drink can refresh you on a hot day.

A cold drink can restore your energy and make you feel better in hot weather.

The weekend helped him refresh his mind.

The weekend gave him time to relax and regain his mental energy.

💡

Often used for restoring physical or mental energy.

💻Technology
technical

to update or renew something, especially computer data

Press F5 to refresh the webpage.

Pressing F5 reloads the webpage to show the latest version.

The app needs to be refreshed to get the latest updates.

The app needs to be updated to receive the most recent changes.

💡

Commonly used in computing to reload or update data.

general

to make something look or feel new or improved

A coat of paint can refresh an old room.

Painting an old room can make it look new and improved.

The new decor refreshed the entire space.

The new decorations made the space feel fresh and updated.

💡

Used to describe making something look or feel new.

Collocations

refresh your memoryto remind someone of something they may have forgottenrefresh the pageto reload a webpage to see the latest versionrefresh your mindto relax and regain mental clarity

Synonyms

Antonyms

Related Phrases

refreshingadjective
providing a feeling of coolness or energy
refreshmentnoun
something that restores energy or vitality

💡Pro Tip

Common Usage

Use 'refresh' for both physical (e.g., a nap) and digital (e.g., a webpage) contexts.

Gold Rule

Technical Context

In computing, 'refresh' typically means to reload or update data.

📖Word Origin

From Middle English 'refresshen', from Old French 'refreschier', from Latin 'refrigescere' meaning 'to cool again'.

📝Usage Notes

Can be used both literally (restoring energy) and figuratively (making something new or updated). In technology, it often means to reload or update data.

Word Breakdown

re-
again
prefix
+
-fresh
new or clean
root
English Dictionary