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reshape

/ree-sheyp/US // riˈʃeɪp //UK // (riːˈʃeɪp) //

重塑,重塑形象,重塑形体,重新塑造

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    re·shaped, re·shap·ing.

    • : to shape again or into different form.

Synonyms & Antonyms

as inmodify
Forms: reshaped, reshaping

Examples

  • Already, these closures are reshaping the landscapes of our cities.

  • There’s so much about this pandemic—and the way its reshaping our world, for better or worse—that’s out of our control.

  • Here are three ways we’re using the pandemic as a springboard to reshape health care.

  • At the end of the century and into the next, as e-commerce started to reshape the industry, many US retailers remained focused on building physical spaces.

  • There are very few times in one’s life when you have an opportunity to reshape their habits.

  • World War I would reshape psychological boundaries as radically as it did geographical ones.

  • Already, we see how that innovation could reshape this region.

  • Republicans should not try to reshape the government of the United States from the House of Representatives.

  • Instead of retiring from public life, he may reshape it and save the lives of thousands and ultimately tens of thousands.

  • Hartman came to Israel to reshape and rethink Jewish peoplehood, emphasizing modernity and its place in religion.

  • The power to remake and reshape and rebuild planetary conditions to suit man exactly.

  • First—roughly, in pencil: after which correct and reshape as much as you deem necessary.

  • After several years of suggestion, discussion, and change, Mr. Bancroft decided to reshape the entire plan of work accordingly.

  • Reshape in original Camembert form, dust thickly with the crumbs and there you are.

  • The lines of Long-thin-and-hungry seemed to shift and reshape.