¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Restacking
1. restack [v] - See also: restack
Lexicographical Neighbors of Restacking
Literary usage of Restacking
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Queensland Law Journal Reports by W. H. Osborne (1896)
"With regard to the question of restacking after the flood of 5th February, there
was evidence that the removal would have been unsafe. ..."
2. The Texas Civil Appeals Reports: Cases Argued and Determined in the Courts by Texas Court of Civil Appeals (1915)
"At the time of the accident other employees of the defendant were at work taking
down and restacking piles of beams in the yard, but were not then engaged ..."
3. Convention by National Electric Light Association Convention, National Independent Meat Packers Association, University of Georgia College of Agriculture, University of Georgia Dept. of Food Science (1919)
"A slight amount of damage occurred to the laminations in one of these instances,
not sufficiently severe, however, to necessitate restacking. ..."
4. Young Americans in Japan by Edward Greey (1881)
"When all the field is reaped, the laborers take the bundles separately from the
stacks and cut off the heads of grain, restacking the straw ..."
5. A Treatise on the Strength of Timber, Cast Iron, Malleable Iron, and Other by Peter Barlow (1845)
"2dly, It saves a deal of the time and labour necessary for unstacking and restacking
piles of timber, to procure pieces of requisite compass; ..."
6. A Treatise on the Strength of Timber, Cast Iron, Malleable Iron, and Other by Peter Barlow (1845)
"... and restacking piles of timber, to procure pieces of requisite compass ; any
piece of the proper length and ..."
7. The Weekly Reporter by Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords, Great Britain Privy Council (1896)
"... might cover the failure of their officials to take proper measures, when the
floods came or were imminent, to prevent loss by restacking the boxes. ..."
8. A Treatise on the Strength of Materials by Peter Barlow (1867)
"2dly, It saves a deal of the time and labour necessary for unstacking and restacking
piles of timber, to procure pieces of requisite compass; ..."