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
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  • 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.
  • In my vain yearning to refashion my self in the model of Nigella, I would be wise to consider several basic truths.
  • Oil companies, car companies, CNN, Coca-Cola, MacDonald's, Microsoft, and IBM are refashioning the global economy.
  • He is using materials he can recycle or refashion, and the results look wonderful. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rogue installation artists refashion landmasses into wind chimes by secretly boring tunnels to channel air currents. The Times Literary Supplement
  • They can fashion and refashion their identities, and through much of their lives that is just what they do.
  • A determination to suppress or refashion history is the mark of fear, instability and crude nationalism. Times, Sunday Times
  • But somewhere along the way, Texans, known for malapropisms and creative spellings, (heck, the name of the state is even a refashioning of a Caddoan word, Tejas, which means friends) took out the extra "i" and decided to call it pimento. Archive 2007-02-01
  • One possibility would be to suggest ways to refashion the treaty to improve it, rather than to abandon it altogether.
  • Enjoying spectacular views across the firth, it was refashioned in 1916 for the admiralty and enjoyed the patronage of successive generations of the royal family until the late 1980s.
  • Any attempt to "unscramble" the country, pretending that it can be refashioned to meet some "federal" model would be absurd and dangerous. ANC Today
  • Construction crews bustled about and the front door through which Hayes and Gilbert led me revealed an old entry hall being refashioned into a suave, modern lobby.
  • Plans are afoot to refashion the uniform in a bid to make the movement founded by Lord Baden-Powell more appealing to teenagers in the cyber-age.
  • Mastering a tradition of authoritative texts and the facility to refashion these authorities in contemporary contexts were essential elements of clerkly discourse.
  • Another set of approaches for enhancing resource productivity attempts to refashion production processes.
  • Young clerks and farmers believed the romantic dream of the self-made man and refashioned themselves as rugged individualists armed and equipped for a fresh start in the frontier west.
  • Then, to refashion his tattered reputation after what he called “a trivial error,” the longtime spinmeister launched what the British press calls a fightback, a colorful term that may or may not lead to a comeback . The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time
  • A three-sided range of low buildings might have suited the work needs of Victorian agricultural labourers down to the ground, but there are some design challenges in order to refashion such steadings into successful homes.
  • I pledge that i shall refashion, renovate, recycle preloved items for myself with my own hands in fabric, yarn or other medium for the term of my contract. Taking the Plunge Pledge | Mind on Fire
  • By this phrase, I mean an environment in which inhabitants had the opportunity to fashion and refashion their identities, along with the choice of whether to transgress or abide by cultural boundaries.
  • The challenge lies ahead in how to refashion our tools and reformulate our strategies to capture the opportunities and to make more of a difference.
  • Cloth was expensive and hard to come by so the fabric often could not be spared for use in decorative work such as a quilt; previously worn clothing would more likely be refashioned to be worn by another family member. Kate Kelly: American Quilts as Art as Well as Documents of Politics and History
  • Welcome to the topsy turvy world of marketing, where established brands are constantly refashioning themselves to broaden their markets.
  • I pledge that I shall refashion, renovate, recycle preloved items for myself for the term of my contract. DIY Style: Wardrobe Refashion
  • The downstairs of the two little houses had been entirely refashioned.
  • Robert Dayton plays a recently divorced nebbish who decides to refashion himself as a ladies man.
  • He is expected to go further with the effort to "refashion" foreign policy by opening up more senior Whitehall and diplomatic positions to outside experts rather than career civil servants. ITN Headlines
  • Jude is a tour de force, a refashioned version of the Jewish mother as a bohemian, a rebel against convention who critiques mainstream culture.
  • Inc. is testing a major redesign of its website, an overhaul that could refashion the way people shop on the world's largest online retailer.
  • Rogue installation artists refashion landmasses into wind chimes by secretly boring tunnels to channel air currents. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The change is expected to dramatically refashion a multibillion-dollar contest to build a new class of shore-hugging warships that will specialize in missions like combating piracy or chasing drug smugglers. Navy May Split Ship Purchase Between Lockheed, Austal
  • He is using materials he can recycle or refashion, and the results look wonderful. Times, Sunday Times
  • This year, however, we have a golden opportunity to refashion the way politics work: The National Assembly elections in April.
  • Zuka refashions the timeless subject into a contemporary painter's dream of color and movement suffused with a satirist's wit.
  • Taking its cue from David Cameron's wish to "refashion" Britain's external relations, the The Guardian World News
  • The Canadians of today, offspring of immigrants who built the Canadian Pacific Railway, have nonetheless refashioned this motto by blending the roots of their past with the nation of their future.
  • Students are left untaught for half the year so they can attend harvests, pilgrimages and religious festivals (refashioned as pubs, fly-drives and raves).
  • This pool of finance has over the years been increasingly funneled into speculative channels, fueling refashioned booms and busts around the globe.
  • It is also a history of change and decay, of accepting some components of an incoming civilisation and rejecting others and refashioning them in a new and familiar guise.
  • These tiny blue-green algae refashioned their world by excreting oxygen while using hydrogen from water.
  • refashion" foreign policy by opening up some key senior Whitehall and diplomatic positions to outside experts rather than career civil servants. IcScotland
  • From there I'd suggest heading to Ueno, a slightly down-at-heel area, built around a park, that still has a faintly rural feel and reminds you of what Tokyo used to be when its Meiji refashioners, in the late 19th century, took their cues from London and Paris. Big in Japan: why Tokyo is top
  • English will surely also develop along less foreseeable tracks as its users refashion it in new circumstances and ways of life—those forming Global English culture. The English Is Coming!
  • Any attempt to refashion one policy without making it part of the other two is only going to produce a piece of flimflammery.
  • No matter how many fads they run through, no matter how many items they purchase in order to refashion their identity, they can never completely escape the political tragedy of the recent past.
  • But it is hard not to ponder whether more intelligent constitutional reform could have refashioned the assembly in a useful way, rather than simply abolishing it.
  • The most imperial of tiger shooting governor-generals is thus refashioned into a cuddly environmentalist.
  • Clay tablets were rarely baked in antiquity, so it was a simple matter to soak, refashion and reuse them. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Young clerks and farmers believed the romantic dream of the self-made man and refashioned themselves as rugged individualists armed and equipped for a fresh start in the frontier west.
  • Three powers — Germany, China and Iran — face challenges forcing them to refashion the way they interact with their regions and the world.
  • Sulla used his power as dictator to refashion the Roman state.
  • In addition to squandering a large part of Britain's patrimony of civilized institutions, this neo-liberal project of refashioning social life on a primitive model of market exchange has speeded the delegitimation of established institutions of such as the monarchy and the Church. The credit crunch will do for Margaret Thatcher's reputation
  • Nevertheless, the city council is putting the finishing touches to an £11.5m blueprint that will refashion the city centre and kick-start a massive property boom in the northeast.
  • They transform social meaning, refashioning the concept of hacking into one that is imbued with negative content.

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