readjust

[ US /ˌɹiəˈdʒəst/ ]
[ UK /ɹˌiːɐd‍ʒˈʌst/ ]
VERB
  1. adjust again after an initial failure
  2. adjust anew
    After moving back to America, he had to readjust
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How To Use readjust In A Sentence

  • He could feel himself changing, deep inside, he could feel his innards moving around, readjusting, transforming.
  • It does take some readjustment, however, to accept that a national theatre has any business putting non-professionals on a stage.
  • The economic growth rate for next year has slipped further and further as the year goes on, with the latest prediction from the government's top think tank readjusting the figure to a paltry 2.6 percent.
  • We may need to readjust these figures slightly.
  • It is long past time that we readjusted our defensive lines overseas to reflect the collapse of the Soviet Union.
  • After moving back to America, he had to readjust
  • The sensation of disembodiment, an alienated dissociation common to the early phase of readjustment. Skinned
  • I squinted, waiting as my eyes readjusted to the dim light.
  • After living abroad for so long,(sentence dictionary) he found it difficult to readjust to life at home.
  • Once again he had to readjust to living alone.
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