[
UK
/ɹˌiːɪntˈɜːpɹɪt/
]
[ US /ˌɹiɪnˈtɝpɹət/ ]
[ US /ˌɹiɪnˈtɝpɹət/ ]
VERB
- interpret from a different viewpoint
- assign a new or different meaning to
How To Use reinterpret In A Sentence
- Its curved frame suggests almost a modern reinterpretation of the bentwood chair.
- Ancient parfleche and quillwork designs are reinterpreted in beadwork, a craft that arose in the post-Contact era, when glass beads became available beaded moccasins, right, $125 and up; baby mocs shown in additional photos at bottom, $35-$80; Melvin Miner beaded rattle, below, $70. Stephanie Woodard: Adventure Shopping Alert: Sale on Fine Lakota Crafts
- Importantly, a variety of women sustained couture culture, not only as consumers but also as secondary designers, reinterpreting styles for their own bodies and lives.
- The armchair's densely carved scallops and shellwork, rosebuds, floral bouquets, and cartouche-shaped back are loosely based on the rococo style as reinterpreted in French pattern books of the mid-nineteenth century.
- Historical thought redefines the present in terms of a reinterpreted and reconstructed past and thereby facilitates passage into the future.
- Many current and past supreme court justices (William Brennan for example) that are/were defined as liberal, believed that the constitution was theirs to "reinterpret" as the direction of political wind changed and avoid the inconvenience of following the laws established to change it. Which of These Progressive Positions Are Extreme Left?
- The ancient "Book of Songs" needs to be reinterpreted for the young people.
- It's unimaginable what could happen if optimism were reinterpreted as artifice and the pitchmen ended up being punished.
- Donald Worster, on the other hand, provides an analytic reinterpretation of explorer John Wesley Powell as a neglected visionary.
- [For a reinterpretation of Leibniz, with an eye to tropes inter alia, see C. Schneider (2001), bearing in mind Leibniz's own words: “Interpretari est docere circa orationem seu orationem non satis cognitum facere cognitum.”] Tropes