¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Reexpresses
1. reexpress [v] - See also: reexpress
Lexicographical Neighbors of Reexpresses
Literary usage of Reexpresses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Classical Heritage of the Middle Ages by Henry Osborn Taylor (1901)
"He draws this into himself, forms it anew and reexpresses it for the inspiration
of the future. Homer expresses the ideal of the past heroic age as that ..."
2. The Classical Heritage of the Middle Ages by Henry Osborn Taylor (1911)
"Augustine had Slimmed up Christian doctrine and feeling for the West; Gregory
accepts the work of Augustine, but reexpresses Augustinian feelings and ..."
3. The Classical Heritage of the Middle Ages by Henry Osborn Taylor (1901)
"as it still is — transformed in the present. He draws this into himself, forms
it anew and reexpresses it for the inspiration of the future ..."
4. The Classical Heritage of the Middle Ages by Henry Osborn Taylor (1901)
"... but reexpresses Augustinian feelings and conclusions in conformity to his own
character, which is more definitely touched by the spirit and the new ..."
5. New Englander and Yale Review by Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight (1851)
"He reexpresses the language of his texts in formulas of stereotyped phraseology.
He develops his subject after the same method, and he concludes the whole ..."
6. The French Influence in English Literature from the Accession of Elizabeth by Alfred Horatio Upham (1908)
"The Religio Medici also reexpresses Montaigne's regret that man is not able to
procreate alone, without conjunction. Like the Frenchman, Browne affected to ..."
7. The French Influence in English Literature: From the Accession of Elizabeth by Alfred Horatio Upham (1908)
"The Religio Medici also reexpresses Montaigne's regret that man is not able to
procreate alone, without conjunction. Like the Frenchman, Browne affected to ..."
8. The New Englander by William Lathrop Kingsley (1851)
"He reexpresses the language of his texts in formulae of stereotyped phraseology.
He develops his subject after the same method, and he concludes the whole ..."