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realign

[ US /ɹiəˈɫaɪn/ ]
[ UK /ɹˌiːɐlˈa‍ɪn/ ]
VERB
  1. align anew or better
    The surgeon realigned my jaw after the accident

How To Use realign In A Sentence

  • They wanted to streamline operations, so his firm suggested a horizontal realignment of operations.
  • And they got it: a realignment of American politics into parties of left and right. Times, Sunday Times
  • Especially on the left, the defeat in 1849 provoked a period of reassessment which, together with the hardship and loneliness of political exile, led to some substantial political realignments.
  • This war will inevitably lead to a realignment of/within European politics.
  • It would have been a realignment of British politics. Times, Sunday Times
  • There was an item on Dustbury last week about refineries post-Katrina, linking to Hatless in Hattiesburg's suggestion to replace refineries which were destroyed or disabled by Katrina with new refineries on military bases slated for being "realigned," and to Engine of the Future's suggestion to lift for three years the EPA regulations requiring different fuel blends for different regions, so that gasoline can be shipped wherever it's needed, avoiding artificial shortages. Oily residue - BatesLine
  • At the same time, we can also find some helpful revelation for implementing the reorganization system of the new law of bankruptcy from Zheng Baiwen s realignment.
  • This time span covers the florescence of the Cahokian polity and the subsequent social and cultural realignment.
  • This recession/depression/perpetual funk is what I call a realignment recession. The Minority Report -
  • Hobongwana said that the other officials would not be expelled, pending their commitment to realigning themselves with the party within 21 days.
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