rearrange

[ UK /ɹˌiːɐɹˈe‍ɪnd‍ʒ/ ]
[ US /ˌɹiɝˈeɪndʒ/ ]
VERB
  1. put into a new order or arrangement
    Please rearrange these files
    rearrange the furniture in my room
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How To Use rearrange In A Sentence

  • After the rearrangement of boundaries that followed the decisive battle of Ipsus (fought in Phrygia 301 B.C.), these principal states had the outlines shown by the accompanying map. General History for Colleges and High Schools
  • Baker's style is to prearrange deals by patiently and quietly lining up the parties before going public. The Rescue Squad
  • It seemed to him that the ground was prearranged into a form of complex geometry.
  • Together with other Brassica species, it likely descends from a hexaploid ancestor followed by extensive rearrangements, making its genome essentially a triplicated A. thaliana genome.
  • His rearrangement of the furniture left an important room, the anteroom to the drawing room, without a centrepiece.
  • Yet it was only by selection, editing and rearrangement that the facts of nature were marshalled.
  • She has rearranged her childcare in order to get into town for 8.20 am and give herself a better chance of finding a parking space.
  • Governments have a tendency not to solve problems, only to rearrange them. RONALD REAGAN 
  • As it gets colder, rearrange your furniture away from the radiators so that the heating can come on in full effect. The Sun
  • The first prize winner will tour the U.S. in a series of more than 20 concerts prearranged by the Chopin Foundation.
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