What's the difference between recast and remold?

Recast


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To throw again.
  • (v. t.) To mold anew; to cast anew; to throw into a new form or shape; to reconstruct; as, to recast cannon; to recast an argument or a play.
  • (v. t.) To compute, or cast up, a second time.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) "Independence will give us the chance to recast our social security system for the future," she said.
  • (2) This summer, if all goes to plan, the metaphor will be vividly recast: the Globe's stage will itself become a world.
  • (3) It is this sense of being helpless, of being forgotten, of having the social settlement recast in ways that takes away while offering nothing in return, and, above all, of not being heard that so inflames not just students but huge swaths of the British.
  • (4) Recasting is often a semi-colon now, not a full-stop.
  • (5) Perhaps the contrast should now be recast as that between the constitution’s embarrassable and unembarrassable parts.
  • (6) This much is all reassuring, as was his recognition that the whole mould of politics has been recast by the Liberal-Conservative deal, even though he did not spell out what he thought this meant for Labour .
  • (7) Malcolm Turnbull, who ousted Abbott as prime minister in September and recast the national security debate by emphasising mutual respect , has responded by saying that it was important not to tag all Muslims with responsibility for the crimes of a few.
  • (8) Tokyo, like London, offers a city already established on the world stage the opportunity to recast itself in the eyes of the world and its own public.
  • (9) Downing Street itself billed the reshuffle, the only major recasting of government planned ahead of the 2015 election, as an attempt to promote ministers capable of delivering on policies already announced.
  • (10) On Monday Clegg brushed off a question about the timing of the review, which is expected to report around the time of Labour's special conference, when Ed Miliband will aim to recast Labour's relationship with the unions.
  • (11) That could recast the broader political outlook, potentially to the benefit of liberals alarmed by what they see as Bo's leftist tendencies.
  • (12) With the conductivity a different constant in different regions, the variational principle is recast in terms of the charge density on the surfaces of discontinuity.
  • (13) The next morning, as the Lib Dems tried to come to terms with a media that had, overnight, recast their leader from insipid also-ran to hero, poll results that Clegg could not have dreamed of 24 hours earlier were still pouring out.
  • (14) Obama's address comes amid his steady loss of ground on efforts to recast America's approach to fighting terrorism.
  • (15) Although Top Gear has been around for almost 40 years, it was completely reinvented by Clarkson, recast in the distinct mould of his formidable personality.
  • (16) More fundamental, however, is recasting the way in which we do business.
  • (17) Nonetheless, a recasting of relations is compelling for a secretary of state eager to reclaim territory after the foreign policy crises in the Middle East and Afghanistan were hived off to envoys.
  • (18) On Gillard’s account the entire battle is recast.
  • (19) Universal credit , the government's recasting of the welfare benefits system, has had to be reorganised so fundamentally that the government watchdog responsible for grading its implementation has judged that it is now an entirely new project.
  • (20) But a recast could see Labor campaign more aggressively against the perceived weaknesses of Tony Abbott, contradicting its promise to run a positive campaign.

Remold


Definition:

  • (v. t.) Alt. of Remould

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The patient is allowed to do functional exercises 24 hours after reduction with the aid of the spring stepping roller, which not only helps dissipate swelling in the early stage but also remold the articular facet.
  • (2) The forward slipping occurs as a result of forward remolding of the z-a joints secondary to localized degenerative arthritis of these joints.
  • (3) The histological structure of the glomeruli returned almost to normal 15 weeks after the venom injection, with occasional features of remolded-healing, although a small number of glomeruli still showed persisted mild segmental mesangial proliferation as well as mild increase of PAM-positive substance in the mesangial area.
  • (4) Then we take a look at how hospitals' technology acquisition strategies--and vendors' research and development plans--are being remolded by the new capital regulation.
  • (5) Where gross deformity has existed, the use of an "oyster splint" seems to act as a pressure remolding device.
  • (6) In addition, thermoplastic splints are lightweight, less bulky, more durable, water-resistant, and easily remolded.
  • (7) Personally, I do not feel that any biological lens, be it a cornea which has had incisions as with radial keratotomy, or a cornea which is remolded in one way or another as with the excimer laser, will produce predictable refractive results to the extent that is required to satisfy the general needs of the myopic population.
  • (8) A lack of introns has previously been observed for the human leukosialin gene (Shelley, C. S., Remold-O'Donnell, E., Rosen, F. S. and Whitehead, A. S., Biochem.
  • (9) His answer was remoldable craniomandibular appliances.
  • (10) These results suggest that TRAP is useful as a marker of bone remolding in children.
  • (11) Second, we extend the model by allowing a surviving polymer to act upon--to "remold"--its environment; the nature of the environmental action is governed by the "molding" matrix M. When the mold M is the identity matrix, the feedback algorithm reduces to a Hebb learning algorithm form, and a surviving polymer acts to enhance its own survival prospects.
  • (12) Since considerable remolding of brain structures (e.g., cell death and modifications of neuronal architecture) occurs during development, we ask if these cells are preserved in the adult zebrafish and the extent to which neuronal morphology of the larva is conserved during ontogeny.
  • (13) The development of a remoldable craniomandibular (RCM) appliance is the result of four years of clinical research.
  • (14) Generally speaking, we must use all the tools in our armamentarium, including radiation, intra-keloid steroids, surgery and postoperative constant wound pressure in an effort to remold the newly forming collagen.
  • (15) It could be easily molded and remolded to fit the foot, as well as to adjust the position of the foot and ankle.
  • (16) Individually fitted plastic helmets, similar in style to football helmets, have been successfully used to remold the deformed heads of four infants.
  • (17) This report quantitatively compares long-term head remolding achieved by two methods for retarding bone reunion after midline craniectomy for sagittal suture synostosis.
  • (18) The remoldable craniomandibular appliance is designed as an inexpensive and time efficient method of arriving at a differential diagnosis for some patients with temporomandibular joint related headache.
  • (19) IL-4 abrogates the IFN-gamma-mediated activation of peripheral blood monocytes (M. Lehn, W. Y. Weiser, S. E. Engelhorn, S. Gillis, and H. G. Remold, 1989, J. Immunol.

Words possibly related to "recast"

Words possibly related to "remold"