revampment / verb riˈvæmp; noun ˈriˌvæmp /

修缮修补重修重建

revampment2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to renovate, redo, or revise: We've decided to revamp the entire show.
n. 名词 noun
  1. an act or instance of restructuring, reordering, or revising something; overhaul: a revamp of the nation's foreign policy.

revampment 近义词

n. 名词 noun

renewal

更多revampment例句

  1. The San Diego International Airport has for years pursued a revamp of the small, out-of-date Terminal 1, and the airlines that operate there are happy to pay to modernize it and increase the flights it can offer.
  2. Shifts to fulfilling orders from those very same stores and a revamp of the mobile site and app have helped the company weather the challenged and changing retail landscape.
  3. The digital-first overhaul includes a website revamp where online shoppers are now offered options to buy online, pick up in store, curbside pickup and same-day delivery.
  4. One of those – a revamp of the Sports Arena property, made possible by the passage of Measure E, which lifted the 30-foot coastal height limit in Midway – is now in limbo.
  5. It was March 2020, and he had just left his job as head of the New York City Transit Authority, after Governor Andrew Cuomo moved him off a massive revamp of the ailing subways.
  6. The duo will help revamp retail stores as the technology brand reportedly gears up to launch wearable technology.
  7. However, the “feminine” product industry was long in need of a revamp.
  8. The GOP is seeking to revamp its image in an effort to win back the youth vote they lost in the past two presidential elections.
  9. Yes, companies continue to restructure, revamp, and rightsize, often in very public ways.
  10. In the wake of these disappointing numbers and strong competition, is it time for the company to revamp its strategy?
  11. Why revamp and refurbish the old platitudes and dole them out each succeeding year?
  12. She would learn how to keep her own bank-account and revamp her arithmetic.