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Definition of Redub
1. v. t. To refit; to repair, or make reparation for; hence, to repay or requite.
Definition of Redub
1. Verb. To repair or correct something. ¹
2. Verb. To give another name or title to, to dub again ¹
3. Verb. To dub (video material) again; to provide with a new soundtrack. ¹
4. Noun. A video re-edited in any way an editor wants. ¹
5. Noun. (obsolete) A remedy or improvement ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Redub
1. dub [v -DUBBED, -DUBBING, -DUBS] - See also: dub
Lexicographical Neighbors of Redub
Literary usage of Redub
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Glossary of Tudor and Stuart Words: Especially from the Dramatists by Walter William Skeat, Anthony Lawson Mayhew (1914)
"[' The red-shanks of Ireland', Smollett, Humph. Clinker (Davies).] redub ...
7, § 2; '0 gods, redub them ..."
2. A Dictionary of the English Language: Abridged from the American Dictionary by Noah Webster (1833)
"[redub'ling,] repeating. Re-dound', vi to conduce, to contribute. Re-doul', n.
an outwork in fortification. Re-douf-a-hle, a. formidable, to be dreaded. ..."
3. Documents Illustrative of English Church History by Henry Gee, William John Hardy (1896)
"... or be his own judge; but shall truly pay the same, as' hath been accustomed,
to l competent. 2 Om. * the. 4 the same so repaired. ia law. * redub and. ..."
4. Documents Illustrative of English Church History by Henry Gee, William John Hardy (1896)
"... by colour of duty omitted by their curates, detain their tithes, and so redub
one wrong with another, or be his own judge; but shall truly pay the same, ..."
5. Selections from the Sources of English History: Being a Supplement to Text by Charles William Colby (1899)
"... not happened in more than an hundred years before ; and a dishonour wherewith
this realm shall be blotted until God shall give power to redub [redress] ..."
6. History of the Church of England from the Abolition of the Roman by Richard Watson Dixon (1881)
"... and so redub one wrong with another : it lay with the ordinary to correct such
lack or defect in the curate as could be proved upon complaint. ..."