From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishrenewalre‧new‧al /rɪˈnjuːəl $ -ˈnuː-/●くろまる○しろまる○しろまる noun [singular, uncountable]1CONTINUE/START AGAINwhen an activity, situation, or process begins again after a period when it had stoppedrenewal ofa renewal of the recent conflictSpring is a time of renewal.2when you make an agreement or officialdocument continue for a further period of time after it endsrenewal ofthe renewal of our annual licenceMark’s contract comes up for renewal at the end of this year.3 →inner city/urban renewalExamples from the Corpusrenewal• Some have a vivid and excitedsense of life and renewal.• That afternoon the passport was delivered to the SovietEmbassy for renewal on an emergencyapplication.• In fact, Sykes's fellowship comes up for renewal at Christmas, and the word is he won't get it.• Chartwell is offering to rebatehalf of its renewalcommission to clients-3,144ドル in the case of one investor.• But only an enlightened few saw this as a symbol of nationalrenewal.• We've already paid the ordinaryrenewalfee, but do you think we should also have libelslander and officials indemnity?• Although urbanrenewalefforts are under way, century-old buildings often are vacant and boarded.renewal of• Martinez will not seekrenewal of his company's contract.comes up for renewal• In fact, Sykes's fellowship comes up for renewal at Christmas, and the word is he won't get it.From Longman Business Dictionaryrenewalre‧new‧al /rɪˈnjuːəl-ˈnuː-/ noun1[countable, uncountable]COMMERCE when people arrange for a contract, agreement, deal etc to continueThe contractcomes up for renewal next year.The government can deny license renewals if a station doesn’t carry adequate programming for children.a six-month renewal option2[uncountable] when a company, economy, area etc is changed and improvedproposals for economic renewal and growth →corporate renewal →inner city renewal