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re-examine
/ ˌriːɪɡˈzæmɪn /
verb
- to examine again
- law to examine (one's own witness) again upon matters arising out of his cross-examination
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Derived Forms
- ˌre-exˈaminable, adjective
- ˌre-exˈaminer, noun
- ˌre-exˌamiˈnation, noun
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Example Sentences
“The city just needs to re-examine this whole 19th-century burial process,” Hunt, told the New York Times.
The public has generously granted the president more time to re-examine his strategy in Afghanistan.
Vibert took up again the comic paper which he had laid down, and pretended to re-examine the pictures.
However, "from motives of a public nature," the Supreme Court would "re-examine" the grounds of its former decision.
This doubt will lead us to re-examine the reasoning of Berkeley and of Kant, and see if it be well constructed.
I want you to run a new basic survey, ignoring the old one still in operation, to re-examine the check points on our graphs.
For some little while longer did the young party examine and re-examine and talk of their own and each other's treasures.
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