[
US
/ɹiˈvaɪz, ɹɪˈvaɪz/
]
[ UK /ɹɪvˈaɪz/ ]
[ UK /ɹɪvˈaɪz/ ]
VERB
-
make revisions in
revise a thesis -
revise or reorganize, especially for the purpose of updating and improving
We must retool the town's economy
NOUN
- the act of rewriting something
How To Use revise In A Sentence
- We stood our ground, revised the dummy a couple of times and appointed a printer.
- Moving Houses was commissioned by the Kronos Quartet, but here it is played (in a revised version) by the frumpily named Ethel.
- Ten of the unrevised pieces, published between 1995-98, were sufficiently up-to-date when the book went to press.
- The figure was accompanied by an upwardly revised 5.4 per cent increase in November. Times, Sunday Times
- Assuming of course (4) that Germany, which wants to revise the Lisbon Treaty to apply the new rules EU-wide, and France, which wants nothing to do with a re-opening of the Treaty and therefore wants the fines to apply only in euroland, can resolve their differences. Euroland Should Prepare for More Ups and Downs in Its Yo-Yo Economy
- Fifteen years later he expanded and revised, not always accurately, his first brief report on the cataract.
- This multiplicity of perspectives is necessary to my critique of the masculinist models of critical pedagogy and is an important step toward a revised critical-feminist praxis.
- I am always tempted to revise more for my stronger topics.
- In addition, packing sheet also revised today for the button placement, pls refer to attached revised tech pack.
- The clinician must be well-attuned to the patient when the patient may be in the process of reconstructing schemas, thinking dialectically, recognizing paradox and generating a revised life narrative.