Definition of Rearticulate

1. Verb. To articulate again. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Rearticulate

1. articulate [v -LATED, -LATING, -LATES] - See also: articulate

Lexicographical Neighbors of Rearticulate

rearranged
rearrangement
rearrangement reaction
rearrangement reactions
rearrangements
rearranger
rearrangers
rearranges
rearranging
rearrest
rearrested
rearresting
rearrests
rears
rears up
rearticulate (current term)
rearticulated
rearticulates
rearticulating
rearview
rearview mirror
rearview mirrors
rearward
rearward(a)
rearwardly
rearwards
reascend
reascendance
reascended
reascending

Literary usage of Rearticulate

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Diplomat's Dictionary by Charles W. Freeman, Jr. (1995)
"He can even assist the other party to rearticulate his nation's interests in ways which facilitate agreement. Such a dialogue, moreover, can provide a ..."

2. The Exemplary Theatre by Harley Granville-Barker (1922)
"But it is utterly right that we should know next to nothing of Shakespeare himself, and the mild curse of wasted tune is upon him who tries to rearticulate ..."

3. Hostage to Revolution: Gorbachev and Soviet Security Policy, 1985-1991 by Coit D. Blacker (1993)
"... the leadership sought to rearticulate important provisions of the country's military doctrine. Coming at the very outset of the Carter administration, ..."

4. NATO in the Fifth Decade by Keith Dunn, Stephen Flanagan (1992)
"... rearticulate this vision: It cannot be handed down to the Alliance from on high. The Alliance will need wise counsel but, in the end, the Alliance must ..."

5. Latin America Today by Pablo González Casanova (1993)
"The authoritarian solution to this problem will depend on the ability of the political leadership of the current power bloc to rearticulate the control and ..."

6. Researching Violently Divided Societies: Ethical and Methodological Issues by Marie Smyth, Gillian Robinson, INCORE. (2001)
"In conflict situations, people often hide their needs and endlessly rearticulate their positions. Those who therefore take the positional statement (for ..."

7. Magic: Stage Illusions and Scientific Diversions, Including Trick Photography by Albert Allis Hopkins, Henry Ridgely Evans (1901)
"A life- size skeleton now appears and dances around the stage, becomes dismembered, the separated parts floating about, but they finally rearticulate ..."

8. Mobilisation: The Growing Public Interest in Mobile Technology by James Harkin (2003)
"... one ethnographic researcher finds evidence that teenagers are using mobile phones to 'rearticulate locality' as a defence against the alienating effects ..."

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