[
UK
/ɹˌiːɐsˈaɪn/
]
[ US /ˌɹiəˈsaɪn/ ]
[ US /ˌɹiəˈsaɪn/ ]
VERB
- transfer somebody to a different position or location of work
How To Use reassign In A Sentence
- Wake County, which includes the city of Raleigh, does not reassign students individually.
- On Lag 0 Ignored Repetition trials, the probe target was reassigned the word that appeared as the distractor in the second prime display.
- In the film "Becoming Chaz," a documentary about Chaz Bono's female-to-male FTM gender reassignment that aired in May on OWN: The Oprah Winfrey Network, the arduous trek of coming out as transgender was captured. Irene Monroe: Chaz Comes Out Dancing
- ETC3 allows its users to select the parameters for the composition of some random poetry, based upon the “styles” of other poets, whereupon the software goes on to create a text that conforms to these preassigned constraints (be they in the form of a chosen subject, a chosen grammar, a chosen lexicon, etc.). Poetic Machines 07 : Christian Bök : Harriet the Blog : The Poetry Foundation
- You must have known now that I am relieving you from your current post and reassigning you back to internals.
- He then served as an instructor in engineering at West Point for two years after which he was reassigned to a post in Georgia.
- With his place on the social scale preassigned by birth, Valentin is not so fortunate: “What I envy you is your liberty,” he observes, “your wide range, your freedom to come and go, your not having a lot of people, who take themselves awfully seriously, expecting something of you.” Archive 2009-11-01
- It would seem logical that reassignment need only be considered in respect of positions for which the disabled employee is qualified.
- ‘By closing those offices that are no longer efficient, the ministry can instead reassign resources and energy to other matters,’ Chien said.
- Some baiters were reassigned to a ‘Dumpster Task Force’ to ticket people for leaving garbage out.