¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Readapts
1. readapt [v] - See also: readapt
Lexicographical Neighbors of Readapts
Literary usage of Readapts
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Bulletin by Federal Board for Vocational Education, United States (1917)
"Weill's Atelier readapts to their trade former carpenters who have lost an arm,
if their stump is 13 centimeters long, ie, long enough to permit an ..."
2. A Companion to the Greek Testament and the English Version by Philip Schaff (1883)
"The Bible retains with advancing age the dew and freshness of youth, and readapts
itself in ever improving versions to every age in ..."
3. "The Future Belongs to the People," by Karl Paul August Friedrich Liebknecht (1918)
"... he readapts himself, regains and confirms his faith in the human spirit that
was so vivid when he lived with his fellow soldiers. ..."
4. "The Future Belongs to the People," by Karl Paul August Friedrich Liebknecht (1918)
"... toward the end where M. Fribourg returns to a hospital in Paris, broken and
dulled, his faith momentarily befogged. Gradually he readapts himself, ..."
5. Guide to the Use of United States Government Publications by Edith Emily Clarke (1918)
"... and readapts itself by drawing in fresh individualities with a fresh stock of
ideas, stands for all the personalities who at one time and another write ..."
6. Medico-Chirurgical Transactions by Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society of London (1853)
"... after a time, the skin is observed to be less and less flaccid, and ultimately
it readapts itself most perfectly. Should the skin and the pericranium, ..."