¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Rebalances
1. rebalance [v] - See also: rebalance
Lexicographical Neighbors of Rebalances
Literary usage of Rebalances
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Helping Your Child Get Ready for School: With Activities for Children from by Nancy Paulu (1993)
"... and this notion that you can put a label on it and say therefore this goes
there, the rest of the world rebalances and you get back to where you are. ..."
2. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"... this deflection ia compensated by means of a magnet, and the needle brought
back to zero. Then the rebalances A, C, D are arranged so that the ..."
3. A System of Chemistry by Thomas Thomson (1810)
"other '"H"1*1 rebalances. Thus it appears that the component parts of acetic acid
are extremely apt to combine together in those proportions which ..."
4. State of the Petroleum Industry: Congressional Hearing edited by Frank H. Murkowski (2000)
"... and this notion that you can put a label on it and say therefore this goes
there, the rest of the world rebalances and you get back to where you are. ..."
5. A Manual of Applied Mechanics by William John Macquorn Rankine (1861)
"665. mean Effort* and Rebalances.—In Article 515 is given the expression / P ds
for the energy exerted by a varying effort whose magnitude at any instant is ..."
6. The Entomologist's Monthly Magazine by Nathaniel Lloyd and Company (1890)
"... and then by suitable movements of the antennal props, aided by struggles with
the legs, rebalances itself and resumes its normal position. ..."
7. Fasting: The Ultimate Diet by Allan Cott (1997)
"The theory that the body quickly rebalances and heals itself, once it eliminates
accumulated poisons, worked for me. My body became clean, strong, ..."