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revised

[ US /ɹiˈvaɪzd, ɹɪˈvaɪzd/ ]
[ UK /ɹɪvˈa‍ɪzd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. improved or brought up to date
    a revised edition
  2. altered or revised by rephrasing or by adding or deleting material
    the amended bill passed easily

How To Use revised In A Sentence

  • We stood our ground, revised the dummy a couple of times and appointed a printer.
  • 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.
  • 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
  • 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.
  • In addition, packing sheet also revised today for the button placement, pls refer to attached revised tech pack.
  • Still and all, when I say there is something "insidious" about the taste of Dutch Coca-Cola she hs to ask what insidious means -- she knows what it means, but she just has to check, because she doesn't understand why I would choose such a word -- I revised to "malevolent" -- to describe such a benign thing. Evolver Diary Entry
  • The material which eventually made it into Mencken's second chrestomathy was selected, revised, and annotated by Mencken himself.
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