2. Noun. A reinvention; an act of fashioning again. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Refashioning
1. refashion [v] - See also: refashion
Lexicographical Neighbors of Refashioning
Literary usage of Refashioning
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. United Nations Peacekeeping Operations: Ad Hoc Missions, Permanent Engagement by Ramesh Chandra Thakur, Albrecht Schnabel (2001)
"Refashioning the Dialogue: Regional Perspectives on the Brahimi Report on UN ...
Refashioning the Dialogue, note 28. p. 7. 31. See also David Carment and ..."
2. Poetry by Modern Poetry Association (1914)
"We are as incapable of refashioning the novels of Balzac and of Stendhal as the
seventeenth century was of refashioning Montaigne and Rabelais. ..."
3. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1844)
"[Sagittarius Rising is scheduled for publication in America on October 75 by Har-
courty Brace and Company, at $2.50.} Refashioning DEMOCRACY ANARCHIE ou ..."
4. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society by Cambridge Philological Society (1884)
"Au ignorant, sonorous refashioning of sbs. in -ade, a. French -ade fern. ( =
Spanish -ada, Italian -ata) probably after the assumed analogy of ..."
5. English Prose: Its Elements, History, and Usage by John Earle (1890)
"To exemplify the refashioning process I will quote a few instances. ... A droll
product of this refashioning is the word aisle, which before 1500 had been ..."
6. Henslowe's Diary by Philip Henslowe, Walter Wilson Greg (1908)
"It might possibly be a refashioning of the Wise Man of West Chester (63, John a
Kent} owing to a failure of the original piece when revived in Sept. ..."