¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Refashioned
1. refashion [v] - See also: refashion
Lexicographical Neighbors of Refashioned
Literary usage of Refashioned
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Expositions on the Book of Psalms by Augustine (1857)
"Having become unlike, they have withdrawn : when refashioned, let them return.
Whence, saith he, shall we be refashioned ? when shall we be refashioned? ..."
2. Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Standard Work of Reference in Art, Literature (1907)
"But it has often happened that already in vulgar Latin the theme of the nominative
singular had been refashioned after the theme of the oblique cases. ..."
3. Ireland's Literary Renaissance by Ernest Augustus Boyd (1922)
"Assuming that our dreams are old memories'refashioned, AE argues that it is "just
as marvelous but not so credible" to assume that there is an artistic ..."
4. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"But it has often happened that already in vulgar Latin the theme of the nominative
singular liad been refashioned after the theme of the oblique cases. ..."
5. The Philosophy of Humanism: And of Other Subjects by Richard Burdon Haldane Haldane (1922)
"The refashioned dynamical principles, as held by the adherents of relativity,
allow of mathematical proof that the inertial resistance of a moving particle ..."
6. The Philosophy of Humanism: And of Other Subjects by Richard Burdon Haldane Haldane (1922)
"Our ideas, not only in kinematics but also in dynamics, have to be refashioned
because of the new conception of our world. The refashioned dynamical ..."
7. A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church by Augustine, John Chrysostom, Philip Schaff (1887)
"... figure which has been impressed upon it, ; or rather expressed out of a body,
is to retain its place, could it be refashioned after the image j of God ? ..."