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rediscovery

[ UK /ɹˌiːdɪskˈʌvəɹi/ ]
[ US /ɹidɪˈskəvɹi/ ]
NOUN
  1. the act of discovering again

How To Use rediscovery In A Sentence

  • She almost died in wretched poverty, saved at the very end by a rediscovery of her work. HAPPY ANNIVERSARY, LIZA!
  • Today the rediscovery of the manuscripts is prompting a reappraisal of African history. Times, Sunday Times
  • The best part of his expedition had been the rediscovery of his natural passion for making things.
  • They point to hand-lettered reminiscences in the margins about his digressive rediscovery of the country, which took him from washing dishes in a Sydney hotel to membership of an Aboriginal community near Darwin.
  • You never know, I may one day have an hour or two to spare to work them out and shall discover they are the best thing since the rediscovery of unsliced bread.
  • Among the “future-piercing suggestions” extolled by Mr. Shaw we may be sure that the author of “Man and Superman” was pleased to acknowledge Butler’s prediscovery that woman is the pursuer. Samuel Butler: Diogenes of the Victorians
  • Theologically our age has been marked by a rediscovery of eschatology as more than just ‘last things.’
  • Recalling that from early recorded history the sphere has represented an idealized form of the universe, it is understandable, particularly in light of the late quattrocento "rediscovery" of Plato and Plotinus, that the pearl embodied notions of perfection, unity, and purity in miniature. Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
  • A sudden eruption in the manager of common sense on tactical deployment, a rediscovery of cohesive drive among the players, and England could yet bid convincingly for glory in the summer.
  • An undestroyed copy's rediscovery was 150 years in the future from Jefferson's point of view.
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