What's the difference between reassign and regrade?

Reassign


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To assign back or again; to transfer back what has been assigned.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) At 35 wk of age, the females were reassigned to the various light sources in order to achieve all possible combinations of adolescent and breeder light-source treatments.
  • (2) In 1980, Dr. Rubin stated that preservation of the glans to reconstruct the clitoris in male-to-female sex reassignment surgery gave good cosmetic and functional results.
  • (3) The individual psychotherapy consisted of phases of symptomatic expression, emerging depression, interpersonal awareness, symptom resolution and disavowel of the wish for sexual reassignment.
  • (4) The reassignment of the three C-2 histidine resonances of S-protein is confirmed by partial deuteration studies.
  • (5) Transsexuals who had not undergone surgery, although it had been offered to them providing they fulfilled the usual requirements, were classified into various subgroups, measured according to their attitude towards sex reassignment surgery: they were transsexuals with an unaltered wish for surgery, transsexuals who were ambivalent towards surgery (hesitating patients), and transsexuals who had relinquished their wish for surgery and lived in the initial gender role.
  • (6) Subjects were 111 postoperative transsexuals who had been surgically reassigned for at least one year, representing a follow-up rate of 84.1%.
  • (7) Ten patients with female gender dysphoria were treated with exogenous androgen (testosterone [T] enanthate USP) and underwent sex reassignment surgery.
  • (8) The prevalence of transsexualism in Singapore was estimated by counting all the patients who sought sex-reassignment surgery and were subsequently diagnosed as transsexuals by psychiatrists.
  • (9) An administrative challenge to the ban was launched on behalf of Denee Mallon, a Medicare recipient who was denied coverage for a sex reassignment surgery recommended by her physician.
  • (10) People also think that being trans has something to do with child abuse or they obsess over gender reassignment surgery.
  • (11) The trainer used four different strategies for reassigning a homework task of using self-statements to cope with pain produced by immersing one hand in ice water.
  • (12) For this reason, during the last 18 years, 10 individuals with this problem were selected for surgical sex reassignment.
  • (13) The configuration of the C-4 stereocenter was unambiguously assigned for compounds 9 and 10, and certain nmr reassignments have been provided for compound 1.
  • (14) There are clear connections between campaigns to defeat bills that would improve the health of blacks and other disadvantaged groups and acquiescence with the present reassignment of them to the underfunded, overcrowded, inferior, public health-care sector.
  • (15) In conclusion the recent critical re-orientation toward psychotherapy for transsexuals as a method to control psychic disorders by psychic means is corroborated, albeit its chances may be viewed rather skeptically in the light of the present boom of gender reassignment operations.
  • (16) Autosomal dominant aniridia with complete penetrance without Wilms' tumor in five generations with 27 affected family members has been reassigned from chromosome 2p25 to chromosome 11p13.
  • (17) We analyzed data from the 1985 National DRG Validation Study, which carefully reabstracted and reassigned ICD-9-CM diagnosis and procedure codes from a national sample of 7050 medical records, to determine whether coding accuracy had improved since the Institute of Medicine studies of the 1970s and to assess the current coding accuracy of specific diagnoses and procedures.
  • (18) The vocal characteristics of a 63-year-old individual who underwent male-to-female sex reassignment surgery were evaluated.
  • (19) One patient with ambiguous genitalia, who was initially raised as a male, was reassigned female gender at 1 year of age when the diagnosis of ITF was made.
  • (20) A review of the subgenus Petrowimeres is presented including the reassignment of several species to the subgenus Tetrameres.

Regrade


Definition:

  • (v. i.) To retire; to go back.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The subjects then used one of three treatment regimens, were retested for accumulated plaque and regraded.
  • (2) In Wales, the education minister, Leighton Andrews, ordered the WJEC exam board to regrade Welsh students' English papers.
  • (3) After 30 minutes, a second injection of placebo or naloxone was given, and the patient was regraded a third time.
  • (4) Challenged on whether he or anyone else should do anything to restore or change the grades achieved by pupils in England in June, Gove said: "If we were to regrade, or firstly if I were to instruct Ofqual or exam boards to regrade, I would destroy the independence of the regulator.
  • (5) Michael Gove has condemned the "irresponsible and mistaken" decision of the Welsh education minister, Leighton Andrews, to intervene in the disputed GCSEs grades by ordering a regrading exercise.
  • (6) Both the location and the dimensions of the wound as well as the breaking strength of the injured muscles remained inside such narrow limits that the trauma can be regraded as constant.
  • (7) Areas identified by others as area 3a should probably be regraded as parts of area 3b.
  • (8) The regulator insisted it would be inappropriate for either of the sets of exams to be regraded.
  • (9) Five minutes later, the same observer regraded the patient.
  • (10) The documents set out their case for a regrading of GCSE English papers taken by pupils this summer.
  • (11) Two thousand 300 students who took exams set by the Welsh exam board WJEC in Wales have already been regraded on the orders of the Welsh government, which regulates exams set there.
  • (12) There has been, as Guy Standing remarks in The Precariat , an orgy of regrading and redefining jobs as less skilled so that they qualify for lower wages; there has also been a growing confidence that employers do not need to pay higher wages in every annual wage round.
  • (13) The alliance is demanding Ofqual , the exam regulator in England, orders a regrade or face moves to force a judicial review in the high court.
  • (14) The women accepted a pay increase, still less than the men, but the regrading issue was not resolved until after another strike years later, in 1984, when they were finally classified as skilled workers.
  • (15) All cases were regraded according to a classification of Isaacson et al into high grade and low grade B-cell mucosa associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma.
  • (16) There was no difference between SLE and progressive polyarthritis as regrads the cold precipitation of rheumatoid factors.
  • (17) The common misconception of Norrie's disease being regraded as microphthalmia or hereditary corneal dystrophy instead of phthisis is noted.
  • (18) All lesions were regraded blind and twice by two pathologists.
  • (19) If a restructuring is essential, neither they nor I can see any reason why Marie and her colleagues shouldn’t have their jobs regraded and their pay preserved.
  • (20) It is being brought by an alliance of pupils, schools, councils and professional bodies, who want the students regraded after the boundary for a grade C in GCSE English was raised between January and June.

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