reorientate

[ UK /ɹɪˈɔːɹi‍əntˌe‍ɪt/ ]
[ US /ɹiˈɔɹiɛnteɪt/ ]
VERB
  1. orient once again, after a disorientation
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How To Use reorientate In A Sentence

  • During the Second World War the statue was removed for safe keeping, but on its return the bow was fixed pointing to the south, and then again wrongly reorientated after the road junction was upgraded in the 1990s.
  • It means that schools reorientate their entire effort to success in the tables. Times, Sunday Times
  • And all who connect with the sport - including key sponsors - need to reorientate to the reality of the situation. Times, Sunday Times
  • Sixth, we must prepare ourselves and the working class and progressive movements for the likelihood that imperialism will attempt to reorientate itself strategically.
  • Each chapter focuses on a different character and it is up to us to reorientate ourselves. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Facing the new situations, we should reorientate the training objectives of talents in this major in order to adapt them to the need of social and economic development.
  • Combining bioenergetics and manipulative treatment, a full course involves ten one-hour treatments, each focusing on a different part of the body, which should combine to successfully reorientate the whole.
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