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[ US /ɹiˈvaɪz, ɹɪˈvaɪz/ ]
[ UK /ɹɪvˈa‍ɪz/ ]
VERB
  1. make revisions in
    revise a thesis
  2. revise or reorganize, especially for the purpose of updating and improving
    We must retool the town's economy
NOUN
  1. 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.
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