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[ UK /ɹɪfˈæʃən/ ]
VERB
  1. make new
    She is remaking her image

How To Use refashion In A Sentence

  • Mama Engine is in the middle of her "Great Work" and refashioning Whitechapel into a gritty and grotesque landscape, while Grandfather Clock keeps a kind of orderliness through his own minions and his all-seeing presence. Rabid Reads: "Whitechapel Gods" by S.M. Peters
  • Bermuda shorts arefashionable in some places.
  • A determination to suppress or refashion history is the mark of fear, instability and crude nationalism. Times, Sunday Times
  • A newly refashioned symbiotic relationship between the two adversaries was born.
  • Clay tablets were rarely baked in antiquity, so it was a simple matter to soak, refashion and reuse them. The Times Literary Supplement
  • And it is expected he could go further with the effort to "refashion" foreign policy by opening up some key senior Whitehall and diplomatic positions to outside experts rather than career civil servants. Your Local Guardian | Wimbledon
  • Now, just as it refashions its view on Iran, it is making clear, according to articles last week in the Russian newspaper Kommersant, that its view of cooperating with NATO on missile defense must involve "sectorization," or giving Russia responsibility for an area in Eastern and Northern Europe that NATO believes would recreate a Soviet-type zone of influence. NYT > Home Page
  • Steel is another young pasticheur refashioning the music of the past for the modern audience. Times, Sunday Times
  • Since then, he's refashioned the constitution and the government to keep himself in power.
  • We train young people in the area - for instance, to refashion old timber - and have created 100 jobs in a poor rural area.
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