Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Simple past tense and past participle of
refashion .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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A 'refashioned' root is not a root "displaying the proper sound changes".
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But control orders are likely to stay in a "refashioned" form.
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A 'refashioned' root is not a root "displaying the proper sound changes".
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Everyone was talking about how he had turned it around after Chappaquiddick, that he had "refashioned" himself after that despicable debacle in which he drunkenly drove his car off a small bridge and left the young woman he was with in the passenger seat to die while he went home to call his lawyer.
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Walt Whitman's magnificent lament on the death of Abraham Lincoln, "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd," refashioned "Lycidas" in Whitman's distinctly American idiom, and the poem's influence continued throughout the 20th century.
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To lessen the sense of shame I unstitched all my shirts and trousers and 'refashioned' them to look and feel more like civilian clothing and less like bin liners.
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This fresh addition to Global English has been adapted and refashioned with amazing speed, and to diverse uses.
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This fresh addition to Global English has been adapted and refashioned with amazing speed, and to diverse uses.
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The latter had been the freewheeling star of rugby's Arms Park before the war and thereafter he at once refashioned Glamorgan cricket, indeed outrageously inspiring championship victory in 1948.
How the R&A made its mark at Stalag Luft III | Frank Keating
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It was supremely accomplished as a technical performance, as a piece of inspired mimickry, and as a séance summoning up a sympathetically refashioned ghost of someone who is not, in fact, dead.
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