2. Verb. (alternative form of reembody) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Reembody
1. embody [v -BODIED, -BODYING, -BODIES] - See also: embody
Lexicographical Neighbors of Reembody
Literary usage of Reembody
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Popular Science Monthly (1874)
"I propose, therefore, now to reembody my views in a more popular form, with such
additions as have occurred to me since. There are four planes of material ..."
2. The Popular Science Monthly by Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress) (1874)
"I propose, therefore, now to reembody my views in a more popular form, with such
additions as have occurred to me since. There are four planes of material ..."
3. The Dial by Margaret Fuller, Ralph Waldo Emerson, George Ripley (1842)
"... induced by Christianity, to the Greek era with its harmonious development of
body and mind, striving to reembody the loved phantom of classical beauty ..."
4. The Andover Review (1892)
"... who knew that neither the language nor the formulated thought of bygone
generations was appropriate to modern men, and he showed us how to reembody and ..."
5. Representative Phi Beta Kappa Orations by Phi Beta Kappa (1915)
"... the flux is not all, if the good, the true, and the beautiful are something
real and ascertainable, if these eternal ideals reembody themselves from age ..."
6. Writing of Today: Models of Journalistic Prose by Gerhard Richard Lomer, John William Cunliffe (1915)
"... will draw wisdom out of life ; in to work selectively at all upon the data of
many ways he will reembody that wisdom experience, insist that all things ..."