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repackage

/ree-pak-ij/US // riˈpæk ɪdʒ //UK // (riːˈpækɪdʒ) //

重新包装,重新打包,再包装,改装

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    re·pack·aged, re·pack·ag·ing.

    • : to package again or afresh, as in a different style, design, or size: The soap has been repackaged to be more eye-catching.
    • : to package for sale under one's own label: The goods are purchased in bulk and repackaged by the store.
    • : to remake or alter so as to be more appealing or desirable: That politician's image needs to be repackaged.

Examples

  • In the endless search for hype, the Golden Arches has had better luck repackaging its consistent menu with in-demand celebrities like Travis Scott or BTS than it ever will with a mustard-mayo sauce, no matter how delicious it is.

  • Each stage went live with the sunrise every morning and was then repackaged into a two-hour prime-time show.

  • In the same way OAN repackages propaganda as news, this media ecosystem provides a veneer of objective analysis to the visceral core of the fraud belief system.

  • The video has never truly gone away, dying down on one platform only to reemerge in some form, often memed and repackaged, the employee said.

  • You had agencies and ad tech vendors collecting our data, reusing, repackaging and monetizing it.

  • Shih says she hopes to repackage the system for use in future disaster zones.

  • The President can repackage and brand many of the programs in the stimulus.