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relearn

[ US /ɹiˈɫɛɹn/ ]
[ UK /ɹɪlˈɜːn/ ]
VERB
  1. learn something again, as after having forgotten or neglected it
    After the accident, he could not walk for months and had to relearn how to walk down stairs

How To Use relearn In A Sentence

  • There would be a flurry of coding and decoding activity in time of war, but with the coming of peace, cryptographic knowledge and skills would atrophy and have to be relearned again at the next outbreak of hostilities.
  • I've had to relearn the game from square one.
  • North American workers in the lowland tropics expect to "relearn" agriculture in their new settings, since the climates and crops of the lowland tropics are so different from temperate regions. Chapter 24
  • Dean also relearnt the lessons of the dotcom boom.
  • In a post-feminist world, he adds, boys may want to relearn courtesies such as holding open doors and seating a girl at dinner.
  • In life, we have to learn, unlearn, and relearn if we are to improve ourselves and better our lives. Dr T.P.Chia 
  • ‘I have struggled through the system and I did not want to go anywhere else and relearn new surroundings,’ said the shy 17-year-old.
  • Catholicism represented by the "minster," and he relearns his faith "from the book whose words are grav'd in light Contesting the Heterodoxy: Mrs. Hemans vs. Lord Byron
  • Ancient camp sites are still used by people eager to relearn old ways.
  • Pope Benedict: Church must repent, 'relearn' justice. Religion News: Religious News and Headlines
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