Skip to main content

reexamination

/ree-ig-zam-in/US // ˌri ɪgˈzæm ɪn //UK // (ˌriːɪɡˈzæmɪn) //

复审,复查,复检,复核

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    re·ex·am·ined, re·ex·am·in·ing.

    • : to examine again.
    • : Law. to examine again after having questioned him or her previously.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • It’s clear there’s an appetite among the key 18-to-34 demographic to reexamine as adults what they remember absorbing in fragments during childhood.

  • If nothing else, recent events should cause us to reexamine our assumptions about the relationships between the First Amendment, content regulation, corporate power and any hope for a democratic future.

  • So modern marketers are having to reexamine their toolkits, and what goals can be achieved by which levers across message, moment and medium.

  • Now inmate advocates and public health experts hope that officials will continue to reexamine who should really be inside and for how long.

  • Part post-holiday reset, part chance to reexamine one’s relationship with alcohol, it’s particularly popular with young adults.

  • A string of tragic deaths leads the author to reexamine her roots.

  • In May 2011, Scotland Yard launched a shadow investigation called Operation Grange to reexamine the original police work.

  • My experience with Witness allowed me to reexamine why I do what I do.

  • The U.S. should then reexamine the amount of American aid with an eye to restoring it to its previous levels.

  • Deep faith may resonate in our position, but it is the ethic of love that forces us to prayerfully reexamine our position.

  • Reexamine the facts then and see if they are not compatible with another explanation.

  • You would think the maritime force would reexamine the method it provides air power from the sea, vital yet today too vulnerable.

  • The secretary ordered the services to reexamine their policies and submit detailed plans for carrying out this directive.

  • I challenge Congress to reexamine those policies and to reverse them.

  • The scientific mind holds opinions tentatively and is always ready to reexamine, modify or discard as new evidence comes to light.