[
UK
/ɹˌiːdaɪɹˈɛkt/
]
[ US /ˌɹidɝˈɛkt/ ]
[ US /ˌɹidɝˈɛkt/ ]
VERB
-
channel into a new direction
redirect your attention to the danger from the fundamentalists
How To Use redirect In A Sentence
- On the taxes proposed she said, "Those concerned by our wish list's ` nanny state 'implications might helpfully redirect their focus to the many unseen measures intentionally adopted by the food industry to shape our behaviour … It seems that without our knowledge or consent we are subject to the pervasive' nannying 'activities of industry. THE MEDICAL NEWS
- Known as chemurgy, the science lost much of its ‘reason for being’ after WWII when the petroleum industry redirected its attention from the war effort to commercial products.
- The intent was to redirect some of the hunters' energy from shooting game to caring for it, thereby preserving enough game to satisfy increasing numbers of hunters.
- IT fix No. 6: SpamIf it were possible to redirect the time and effort poured into antispam and antimalware code over the last 10 years, we'd already have colonies on Mars and probably a new form of renewable energy. Five-year plan: 8 problems IT must solve
- There is now a real movement in our society to pull our youngsters back from the edge of the precipice of self-annihilation and redirect our children toward a wholesome lifestyle which will allow them a chance to fulfill their potential.
- But they have promised they will take ‘public taste’ into account before any decision is made to redirect the hot air from the cremators into the chapel.
- The key takeaway from the book is that it is unquestionably worth your time and effort to learn the ins-and-outs of frequently overlooked subjects, such as HTTP, compression, redirects, and DNS.
- They can't stop her in her course, but the original mission, a lunar landing, gives them the goetic leverage to redirect it that much. Operation Luna
- Any questions that veer away from the topic that is uppermost in her mind are swiftly redirected. Times, Sunday Times
- The deep breaths exhaled by his broad lines, his declarative sentences and their assertive plangency, his deliberate tactlessness and brave humor, redirect the reader to a history of poetic Yanks: Whitman, Williams.