¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Rebooked
1. rebook [v] - See also: rebook
Lexicographical Neighbors of Rebooked
Literary usage of Rebooked
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Urquhart and Glenmoriston: Olden Times in a Highland Parish by William Mackay (1893)
"... debt or reliev ye gentlemen from hazard at legal executions in their
contrar [against them]. Mr Macculloch having been " sharply rebooked for all these ..."
2. Regulationsby Dublin (Ireland). Irish Railway Clearing House by Dublin (Ireland). Irish Railway Clearing House (1861)
"RESOLVED—That Waggons laden with Goods or Cattle, booked to rebooked at•': a
Junction and there rebooked, are to be considered as used for local Junctions. ..."
3. Switzerland and the Adjacent Portions of Italy, Savoy, and Tyrol: Handbook by Karl Baedeker (Firm) (1903)
"... to reclaim it and get it rebooked in time. Hotela. On the right
bank : «SCHWEIZERHOF (PI. a ; D, E, 2), R. from 5, « R. from 4, ..."
4. Switzerland and the Adjacent Portions of Italy, Savoy, and Tyrol: Handbook by Karl Baedeker (Firm) (1899)
"If luggage is booked to Lucerne only, it is often impossible to reclaim it and
get it rebooked in time. Hotels. 'SCHWEIZERHOF (PI. a; D, E, 2), ..."
5. Switzerland and the Adjacent Portions of Italy, Savoy, and Tyrol: Handbook by Karl Baedeker (Firm) (1907)
"If luggage is booked to Lucerne only, it is often impossible to reclaim it and
get it rebooked in time. Hotels. ..."
6. Switzerland and the Adjacent Portions of Italy, Savoy, and Tyrol: Handbook by Karl Baedeker (Firm) (1897)
"... booked through to some station beyond Lucerne. If luggage is booked to Lucerne
only, it is often impossible to reclaim it and get it rebooked in time. ..."
7. The Parliamentary Debatesby Great Britain Parliament by Great Britain Parliament (1905)
"Therefore the exact effect of the Amendment would be that if aliens came to this
country and rebooked to the United States or Canada, and were rejected, ..."
8. Railway Economy: A Treatise on the New Art of Transport, Its Management by Dionysius Lardner (1850)
"... expedited over the railways of different companies without being rebooked,
repacked, or transhipped. The point was practically conceded, and the traffic ..."