¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Reconception
1. conception [n -S] - See also: conception
Lexicographical Neighbors of Reconception
Literary usage of Reconception
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Lectures on Shakespeare by Henry Norman Hudson (1848)
"It is on this point that Shakspeare has suffered most from a narrow, creeping
criticism ; for if his critics have seldom risen to the reconception of a ..."
2. Discourses on Various Subjects by Jacob Duché (1779)
"... a reconception of the Light and Love of GOD, an Angel near its birth. To this
feed, this birth, this fon, this reconception, this angel in thy ..."
3. Lectures on Shakespeare by Henry Norman Hudson (1848)
"It is on this point that Shakspeare has suffered most from a narrow, creeping
criticism ; for if his critics have seldom risen to the reconception of a ..."
4. Discourses on Various Subjects: By Jacob Duché, ... by Jacob Duché (1780)
"... a reconception of the Light and Love of GOD, an Angel near its birth. To this
feed, this birth, this fon, this reconception, this angel in thy ..."
5. Publishers Weekly by Publishers' Board of Trade (U.S.), Book Trade Association of Philadelphia, American Book Trade Union, Am. Book Trade Association, R.R. Bowker Company (1921)
"... of the world position of Jerusalem today, a reconception of the meaning of
her history of deep interest at this moment of world readjustment. ..."
6. Representative English Comedies: With Introductory Essays and Notes, an by Charles Mills Gayley, Alwin Thaler (1914)
"... character-types were sufficient to induce a reconception suitable for comedy.
Yet it would be very strange indeed, ..."