¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Rechanneling
1. rechannel [v] - See also: rechannel
Lexicographical Neighbors of Rechanneling
Literary usage of Rechanneling
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Journal of Experimental Medicine by Rockefeller University, Rockefeller Institute, Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research (1908)
"It was the operator's impression that with an open skull the atmospheric pressure
against the hemisphere was sufficient to allow a rechanneling of the ..."
2. The Economics of Apartheid by Stephen R. Lewis (1990)
"... by the United States and the European Economic Community, where the steel
industries are in desperate shape. South Africa will respond by rechanneling ..."
3. South Florida Ecosystem Restoration: Joint Hearing Before the Committee on edited by Craig Thomas (1999)
"The construction phase of this project calls for backfilling portions of the
Kissimmee canal (C-38 canal), removing structures, and rechanneling the river. ..."
4. The Essence of Hayek by Friedrich August Hayek, Chiaki Nishiyama (1984)
"workers, collective farm peasants, and consumers; it becomes synonymous with the
manipulation of official policies and officials, with the rechanneling of ..."
5. Religion and Industrial Society: The Protestant Social Congress in by Harry Liebersohn (2007)
"The emergence of a wealth of social reform movements after 1900 came about in
part from a rechanneling of middle-class influence from electoral politics ..."
6. Agricultural Expansion and Pioneer Settlements in the Humid Tropics by Walther Manshard, William B. Morgan (1988)
"Even prior to the transfer of sovereignty (end of 1949), a Ministry for Community
Development already existed, taking care of rechanneling ex-servicemen ..."
7. An Assault on Poverty: Basic Human Needs, Science and Technology by United Nations Staff, Idrc, UNCTAD (1997)
"Sufficient international prestige and publicity should be vested in an effort to
galvanize further actions aimed at rechanneling, to some extent, ..."