- reappraise
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v.t., reappraised, reappraising.
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Universalium. 2010.
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Universalium. 2010.
reappraise — UK US /ˌriːəˈpreɪz/ verb ► [I or T] to examine a situation or activity again in order to make changes to it, for example in order to make it more modern or effective: »The recent downturn in stock markets around the world has made people… … Financial and business terms
reappraise — index reassess Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
reappraise — [rē΄ə prāz′] vt. reappraised, reappraising to make a fresh appraisal of; reconsider reappraisal n … English World dictionary
reappraise — [[t]ri͟ːəpre͟ɪz[/t]] reappraises, reappraising, reappraised VERB If you reappraise something such as an idea or a plan, you think carefully about it and decide whether it needs to be changed. [FORMAL] [V n] It did not persuade them to abandon the … English dictionary
reappraise — re|ap|praise [ˌri:əˈpreız] v [T] to examine something again in order to consider whether you should change it or your opinion of it = ↑reassess ▪ People began to reappraise their values. >reappraisal n [U and C] … Dictionary of contemporary English
reappraise — verb (T) to examine something again in order to consider whether you should change your opinion of it: The time had come to reappraise their economic strategy. reappraisal noun (C, U) … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
reappraise — verb appraise again … Wiktionary
reappraise — v. reevaluate, estimate again, reassess … English contemporary dictionary
reappraise — verb appraise again or differently. Derivatives reappraisal noun … English new terms dictionary
reappraise — re·appraise … English syllables