Definition of Reblending

1. reblend [v] - See also: reblend

Lexicographical Neighbors of Reblending

rebirthings
rebirths
rebit
rebite
rebites
rebiting
rebitings
rebits
rebitten
rebled
rebleed
rebleeding
rebleeds
reblend
reblended
reblending (current term)
reblends
reblent
reblock
reblocked
reblocking
reblocks
reblog
reblogged
reblogger
reblogging
reblogs
rebloom
rebloomed
rebloomer

Literary usage of Reblending

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Immortal Manhood: The Laws and Processes of Its Attainment in the Flesh by Koresh (1902)
"... through the actual physical dissolution of the two sexes and M their reblending into conjugial ..."

2. The American Naturalist by American Society of Naturalists, Essex Institute (1898)
"... if this were not the case, there would be constant crossing and reblending of nearly related forms. In the matter of isolation of the different islands, ..."

3. Anatomy, Descriptive and Surgical by Henry Gray (1901)
"... splits to enclose this muscle, and, reblending at its lower border, becomes incorporated with the axillary fascia at the anterior fold of the axilla. ..."

4. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: “a” Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature edited by Hugh Chisholm (1911)
"... the extraction and separation of the essential oils yielded by less valuable plants, and their reblending to form marketable perfumes, ..."

5. The Old World in the New: The Significance of Past and Present Immigration by Edward Alsworth Ross (1914)
"... immigrants was only a reblending of kindred stocks, for Angles, Jutes, Danes, and Normans were wrought of yore into the fiber of the English breed. ..."

6. A System of Metaphysics by George Stuart Fullerton (1904)
"We have an all-pervasive transfusion with a reblending of all material. And we can hardly say that the Absolute consists of finite things, when the things, ..."

7. Immigration and Americanization: Selected Readings by Philip Davis, Bertha Schwartz (1920)
"... for the process was merely a reblending of kindred stocks. But the German and the Scandinavian immigration has diminished of late years, and, ..."

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