2. Noun. (context: gerund of revamp) An act in which something is revamped ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Revamping
1. revamp [v] - See also: revamp
Lexicographical Neighbors of Revamping
Literary usage of Revamping
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Narrative and Critical History of America by Justin Winsor (1884)
"etc., tabula, multis in locis emendata a J, Danck- ers," which, however, in
Asher's opinion was but a revamping of the earlier Visscher plate.1 The map ..."
2. The New Laokoon: An Essay on the Confusion of the Arts by Irving Babbitt (1910)
"... whereas what we found in many earlier Aristotelians was a somewhat Jesuitical
revamping of the theological spirit and its application to literature. ..."
3. The Latin Poets: An Anthology by Nathan Haskell Dole (1905)
"Weigh then these things with candour and forgive The Modern, if what Ancients
did they do! — Translation of GEORGE COLMAN. ORIGINALITY IN revamping. ..."
4. Raymond Mhlaba's Personal Memoirs: Reminiscing from Rwanda and Uganda by Raymond Mhlaba, Thembeka Mufamadi, Human Sciences Research Council, Robben Island Museum (2001)
"revamping our political movement At long last we were set free. The journey to
Port Elizabeth felt unreal. On many occasions I pinched myself to reassure ..."
5. A Political Crime: The History of the Great Fraud by Albert M. Gibson (1885)
"... elected: The Electoral-commission bill a revamping of the Federal device of
1800: The inconsistencies of the rulings of the Electoral commission pointed ..."
6. The U. S. Environmental Industry: Meeting the Challenge: U. S. Industry by David R. Berg, Grant Ferrier (2000)
"3.2 revamping Government Policies and Initiatives to Enhance the Competitiveness
of the Environmental Industry Industry executives and many of their ..."