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"rearticulate" Definitions
  1. to articulate (something) again: such as
  2. to give new or further utterance or expression to
  3. to reassemble and join together all or some of (the bones comprising the skeleton of a dead animal)
"rearticulate" Antonyms

7 Sentences With "rearticulate"

How to use rearticulate in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "rearticulate" and check conjugation/comparative form for "rearticulate". Mastering all the usages of "rearticulate" from sentence examples published by news publications.

" Regardless of the outcome, the Supreme Court is likely to rearticulate the standards determining the nature of "personal benefit.
So far, he has grabbed early opportunities to articulate and rearticulate his judicial philosophy, changed the dynamic on the bench, and even managed to ruffle a few feathers.
The gun-rights groups were not just persuading them to support gun rights; they were also helping my friends rearticulate their own lives in terms of a broader vision of the future.
All it took was an American Le Pen: someone who could rearticulate American bigotry in the post–Jim Crow era in the way the Front National rearticulated French bigotry in the post-Vichy era.
His aim as a minister was to defend and rearticulate traditional Scottish Presbyterian theology, without altering or disguising it.
In Canada such an institution never did develop."Even though scholars working in Canada during the 1980s could rearticulate composition as humanistic study, they were unable to remove composition from the discursive field of practicality, popular culture, and Americanization." -- Kevin Brooks, "National Culture and the First-Year English Curriculum: A Historical Study of 'Composition' in Canadian Universities." The American Review of Canadian Studies (Winter 2002): 673-694.
Following the losses, Wolfson helped organize more than a dozen LGBTQ leaders to recommit to the fight, rearticulate the strategy, and renew the call for an expanded national campaign. The outcome of many discussions was a concept paper, drafted chiefly by the ACLU’s Matt Coles together with Wolfson, “Winning Marriage: What We Need to Do”. Winning Marriage: What We Need to Do, June 21, 2005, via freedomtomarry.org. The concept paper, which became known as the “10-10-10-20” or “2020 Vision,” paper (referencing the group’s aim to win marriage by 2020), was signed by every major LGBT group.

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