A renewed embrace. Chieflyfigurative and in figurative contexts.
Origin
Mid 19th century; earliest use found in Robert Browning (1812–1889), poet. Either from re-embrace, or from re- + embrace.
re-embrace2
/ˌriːɪmˈbreɪs//ˌriːɛmˈbreɪs/
verb
[with object]And without object. To embrace again.
Origin
Early 17th century; earliest use found in John Florio (1553–1625), author and teacher of languages. From re- + embrace, originally after Italian †rimbracciare (sporadically attested in the late 14th–early 15th centuries and 1611 in Florio).