¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Reinvented
1. reinvent [v] - See also: reinvent
Lexicographical Neighbors of Reinvented
Literary usage of Reinvented
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Vergilius Redivivus: Studies In Joseph Addison's Latin Poetry by Estelle Haan (2005)
"(ii) Virgil Reinvented: From Eclogue to Encomium Addison's poem is cast in the
form of an ... Reinvented ..."
2. A cyclopædia of biblical geography, biography, natural history, and general by John Parker Lawson, John Marius Wilson (1866)
"Many practices, of many kinds, in many arts, have been used, lost, and reinvented ;
and many false arguments for the pristine rudeness of mankind, ..."
3. Businesslike Government: Lessons Learned from America's Best Companies by Albert Gore, Scott Adams (1997)
"... government has been reinvented when you see it Who hasn't heard that movie
line "Show me the money"? But that attitude is not unique to sports contracts ..."
4. Iron: An Illustrated Weekly Journal for Iron and Steel Manufacturers edited by Sholto Percy, Perry Fairfax Nursey (1843)
"... very high degree of antiquity is assigned to the lantern bellows pump, which
is said to have been " reinvented by machinists in almost every age. ..."
5. Open Wide: Futures for Dentistry in 2010 by Perri 6, Ben Jupp, Tom Bentley (1996)
"NHS Reinvented. The NHS reinvented story assumes that political energy and
attention are given to NHS dentistry and a decision is taken to re-organise, ..."
6. Think Scenarios, Rethink Education edited by Centre for Educational Research (2006)
"... exercises that put policy analysts and politicians into situations that demand
their interaction. Do schools need to be reformed or reinvented? ..."
7. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1918)
"The first modern suggestion of such a process was made by Prof. James Clerk-Maxwell,
in 1861 or before, and the principle was reinvented and elaborated by ..."