¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Rearticulated
1. rearticulate [v] - See also: rearticulate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Rearticulated
Literary usage of Rearticulated
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Place of Christ in Modern Theology by Andrew Martin Fairbairn (1895)
"... as it were, rearticulated. His own authent'c 1" Die Lehre Jesu " (1886 and 1890). ..."
2. Dealignment: A New Foreign Policy Perspective by Mary Kaldor, Richard A. Falk, Gerard Holden (1987)
"From such a perspective, rearticulated in different ways in recent years by such
seemingly diverse commentators as George Shultz and Zbigniew Brzezinski, ..."
3. The Exceptional Child by Maximilian Paul Eugen Groszmann (1917)
"He stayed only a few months, and left altogether rearticulated, mentally and
emotionally. Since then he has been standing at the head of his classes in ..."
4. The Exceptional Child by Maximilian Paul Eugen Groszmann (1917)
"He stayed only a few months, and left altogether rearticulated, mentally and
emotionally. Since then he has been standing at the head of his classes in ..."
5. Colloids in Biology and Medicine by Heinrich Bechhold (1919)
"... and thus explain their properties by splitting them, synthesizing them, and
comparing the regenerated (rearticulated) substance with the original, ..."
6. Health Insurance: Management Strategies Used by Large Employers to Control Costs by Michael Gutowski (1998)
"Enthoven and others have refined and rearticulated the concept since it was first
introduced in the late 1980s. ..."
7. Colloids in Biology and Medicine by Heinrich Bechhold (1919)
"... and thus explain their properties by splitting them, synthesizing them, and
comparing the regenerated (rearticulated) substance with the original, ..."
8. The Urban Condition: Space, Community, and Self in the Contemporary Metropolis by Ghent Urban Studies Team (1999)
"This discourse (echoing nineteenth-century perspectives of the "undeserving poor")
rearticulated the crude dualism of "two societies," but now with a ..."