¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Reimagine
1. imagine [v -GINED, -GINING, -GINES] - See also: imagine
Lexicographical Neighbors of Reimagine
Literary usage of Reimagine
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Culture of Violence by Kumar Rupesinghe (1994)
"In so doing, they misconstrue or radically distort the meaning (reimagine the
imaginary) of the events of myth. In effect, they create mythic falsities out ..."
2. The Maecenas and the Madrigalist: Patrons, Patronage, and the Origins of the by Anthony M. Cummings (2004)
"... more accurately, reimagine—himself, his built environment, and his position
in Florentine society. The images and materials he deployed suggest that he ..."
3. On My Honour: Guides and Scouts in Interwar Britain by Tammy M. Proctor (2002)
"Men and women were redefining homes and sexuality as well as their definitions
of nation and empire, often searching for ways to both reimagine the past and ..."
4. Bringing the Outside In: Visual Ways to Engage Reluctant Readersby Sara B. Kajder by Sara B. Kajder (2006)
"Sara invites us to look at what students already know and use outside the
classrooms, and then to reimagine—and she shows us—how to pair the texts, tools, ..."
5. The Book Buyer by Charles Scribner's Sons (1902)
"I know that he passed through a furnace of which our paltry time can reimagine
nothing, and I know that throughout this trial he affirmed—with monotonous ..."
6. The Kingdom of the Child by Alice Minnie Herts Heniger, Granville Stanley Hall (1918)
"The experiment has been successful because the plays were the kind that are
written by people who are able to reimagine their own childhood ..."
7. The Kingdom of the Child by Alice Minnie Herts Heniger, Granville Stanley Hall (1918)
"The experiment has been successful because the plays were the kind that are
written by people who are able to reimagine their own childhood; ..."