[
UK
/ɹɪklˌæsɪfɪkˈeɪʃən/
]
[ US /ɹiˌkɫæsəfəˈkeɪʃən/ ]
[ US /ɹiˌkɫæsəfəˈkeɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
- classifying something again (usually in a new category)
How To Use reclassification In A Sentence
- job reclassifications for staff
- One argument made by proponents of reclassification is that the FCC could exclude broadband providers from the most rigorous requirements of Title II, a process called “forbearence,” that would keep stringent net neutrality rules as a stick in the closet. Be Careful What You Wish For: Broadband Regulation Could Aid Incumbents « Steve Wildstrom on Tech
- The reclassification came as mounting evidence pointed to its physical and psychological dangers. The Sun
- He refused, however, to guarantee that he would act on any suggested reclassification. Times, Sunday Times
- A constitutional challenge on the basis of whether the Republican reclassification of the bill from fiscal to nonfiscal were legal may have a better chance, says Mayer, but "it's not a slam dunk. TIME.com: Top Stories
- Reclassification is not confined to urban areas. Times, Sunday Times
- Reclassification of dermal fillers as medicines. The Sun
- Near the end of the war, the Federal Aviation Administration's reclassification of South Vietnam as a dangerous combat area had the effect of canceling the insurance of any civil aircraft operating there.
- the report recommended the reclassification of cannabis
- I agree this reclassification is erronious, but I also see D's trying to trump it up into a talking point. Special Report: You Call This a Wetland?