reexamination / ˌri ɪgˈzæm ɪn /

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reexamination 的定义

v. 有主动词 verb

re·ex·am·ined, re·ex·am·in·ing.

  1. to examine again.
  2. Law. to examine again after having questioned him or her previously.

reexamination 近义词

reexamination

等同于 retrospect

reexamination

等同于 revision

reexamination

等同于 correction

更多reexamination例句

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. So modern marketers are having to reexamine their toolkits, and what goals can be achieved by which levers across message, moment and medium.
  4. Now inmate advocates and public health experts hope that officials will continue to reexamine who should really be inside and for how long.
  5. Part post-holiday reset, part chance to reexamine one’s relationship with alcohol, it’s particularly popular with young adults.
  6. A string of tragic deaths leads the author to reexamine her roots.
  7. In May 2011, Scotland Yard launched a shadow investigation called Operation Grange to reexamine the original police work.
  8. My experience with Witness allowed me to reexamine why I do what I do.
  9. The U.S. should then reexamine the amount of American aid with an eye to restoring it to its previous levels.
  10. Deep faith may resonate in our position, but it is the ethic of love that forces us to prayerfully reexamine our position.
  11. Reexamine the facts then and see if they are not compatible with another explanation.
  12. You would think the maritime force would reexamine the method it provides air power from the sea, vital yet today too vulnerable.
  13. The secretary ordered the services to reexamine their policies and submit detailed plans for carrying out this directive.
  14. I challenge Congress to reexamine those policies and to reverse them.
  15. The scientific mind holds opinions tentatively and is always ready to reexamine, modify or discard as new evidence comes to light.