¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Rejustify
1. justify [v -FIED, -FYING, -FIES] - See also: justify
Lexicographical Neighbors of Rejustify
Literary usage of Rejustify
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1922)
"... seeking to rejustify themselves and readily responding whenever a new spirit
animates them and a new world-conception seeks to express itself through ..."
2. Principles of Character Making by Arthur Holmes (1913)
"To rejustify our emphasis in another way let us recall again our discussion of
codes. These devices are just so many unconscious inventions of grown people ..."
3. Empirical Processes: Theory and Applications by David Pollard (1990)
"D To generalize the result to subsets 3" of more general normed linear spaces,
we would need only to rejustify the last few assertions in the proof ..."
4. Principles of Character Making by Arthur Holmes (1913)
"To rejustify our emphasis in another way let us recall again our discussion of
codes. These devices are just so many unconscious inventions of grown people ..."
5. Printing for School and Shop: A Textbook for Printers' Apprentices by Frank Souder Henry (1917)
"Then take out the next word in red, and rejustify the line, continuing in this
way to the end. The final result will be a line with material substituted for ..."
6. The School Printshop by Katharine Marian Stilwell (1919)
"If the changes to be made affect the spacing, put the line in the stick, make
the corrections, and rejustify the line. If the correction involves only the ..."
7. The School Printshop by Katharine Marian Stilwell (1919)
"If the changes to be made affect the spacing, put the line in the stick, make
the corrections, and rejustify the line. If the correction involves only the ..."
8. The School Printshop by Katharine Marian Stilwell (1919)
"... make the corrections, and rejustify the line. If the correction involves only
the substitution of one letter for another of equal width, it may be done ..."