What's the difference between reconsider and reexaminable?

Reconsider


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To consider again; as, to reconsider a subject.
  • (v. t.) To take up for renewed consideration, as a motion or a vote which has been previously acted upon.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Those are the issues for her which I think will cause her to reconsider whether she wants to run.” Clinton was replaced as secretary of state in February 2013, by John Kerry .
  • (2) Campana), has induced the authors to reconsider the surgical approach to this pathology on the basis of anatomo-surgical factors.
  • (3) Last September, propelled by the success of the Irish referendum and the US supreme court decision, the idea that Australian parliamentarians should, as a matter of conscience, reconsider marriage equality was gathering powerful force.
  • (4) The advent of what is called the chemotherapy of mental diseases goes back to the early fifties, when a series of clinical observations led medical research to reconsider this field, that at the time was not particularly developed.
  • (5) Although these are worst case calculations, a consistent approach should be reconsidered to limit the additional effective dose equivalent from impurities to e.g.
  • (6) We mustn’t expect Cameron to reconsider his perspective.
  • (7) Based on preliminary results suggesting the contrary, the purpose of this work was to reconsider the denervation effect of perivascular sympathectomy.
  • (8) O’Dwyer said in the meantime the government will conduct a review and cabinet will reconsider the tax in October or November.
  • (9) Next weekend's sellout UK Feminista summer school should make the gloating critics reconsider.
  • (10) Lucas has stayed to fight for his place in recent seasons, and succeeded, but may reconsider that stance should a tempting offer materialise before 1 September.
  • (11) In the light of this analysis it is argued that the profession should reconsider the place of such documents within the Health Authorities' quality assurance programme.
  • (12) The letter follows a missive that Murphy sent a month ago to Nascar boss Brian France, asking him to reconsider the NRA sponsorship.
  • (13) Campaigners and MPs – including some Tory backbenchers – have been lobbying ministers to mitigate the impact of the welfare cuts by restoring the work allowance in universal credit, and to reconsider the planned £30-a-week cuts in employment and support allowance benefits due in 2017.
  • (14) Q: In the US this has led to a desire to reconsider their laws.
  • (15) One of Browner's first priorities could be to press the EPA to reconsider the decision by the Bush administration to bar California from regulating greenhouse gas emissions.
  • (16) Still, some economists suggest that if the Fed could have foreseen what has ensued in the weeks since it raised rates, it might have reconsidered.
  • (17) It said that given the risks involved in bailing out Greece, eurozone governments should reconsider whether they should continue to provide a lifeline to Athens.
  • (18) Three cases, recently observed, of non-obstetrical gynaecological infections in adults caused by Haemophilus influenzae have prompted us to reconsider this rare pathology.
  • (19) Regardless of which of these proposed mechanisms is responsible for reducing mortality in patients treated with late thrombolysis after myocardial infarction, the limitation of treating patients only within the 4- to 6-hour time window must be seriously reconsidered.
  • (20) It is not clear if Iran received any of these items but a confidential cable released by WikiLeaks appears to show that the head of Iran's drug control department blackmailed the UNODC's representative by suggesting that if the agency did not meet the wishes of Iran, the Islamic republic might "reconsider the scope of its own efforts against the traffickers".

Reexaminable


Definition:

  • (a.) Admitting of being reexamined or reconsidered.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) As one author stated: If nurses really want to see nursing achieve professional status, each of us--educators, administrators, and practitioners--must reexamine our interactions with novice nurses.
  • (2) In order to establish the incidence of cholelithiasis after vagotomy, the patients operated upon in the period January 1st 1966, to December 31st 1971, were reexamined.
  • (3) Moreover, reexamination of the original X-ray maps reported in 1968 and thought to preclude a Tyr-248-Zn interaction now leads to the conclusion that in up to 25 per cent of the molecules in the crystals ttyr-248 interacts with the active site zinc atom (W.D.
  • (4) In 8 of 12 women, IQCCM occurred 2 days before luteinizing hormone peak; in 4 reexamined women, the same results were observed about the intervals from IQCCM onset and luteinizing hormone peak.
  • (5) We have now reexamined this in greater detail and report that it is due to GSH trapping of an electrophilic oxidized SPL species to form an adduct that we have isolated and unambiguously characterized by mass spectral analyses as the glutathionyl-SPL adduct (SPL-SSG).
  • (6) Hypotheses about the disease-predisposing effects of the AT gene in the heterozygote are now being reexamined, retrospectively and prospectively, in almost 150 newly identified AT families.
  • (7) Our results force a reexamination of the process of human texture segregation and of some recent models that were introduced to explain it.
  • (8) The reaction of ferrous bleomycin with dioxygen is reexamined to clarify whether radical species derived from molecular oxygen are generated.
  • (9) The original biopsy tissue obtained in 1969 was reexamined and found also to be SHML.
  • (10) were reexamined in the light of findings with electron microscopy (E.M.) and previously unidentified cellular elements were found to be characteristic of choriocarcinoma and teratoma.
  • (11) The last patient was a 64-year-old male and was accidentally demonstrated to have a right renal mass by ultrasonography when he was reexamined for the hepatic abnormality found in AMHTS.
  • (12) We used a computer model of liver glycogen turnover to reexamine the data of Devos and Hers, who reported the time course of accumulation in and loss from glycogen of label originating in [1-14C]galactose injected at different times after the start of refeeding of 40-h fasted mice or rats.
  • (13) These results were assessed by reexamination of 136 roots on which apical surgery was performed.
  • (14) The data of a study conducted in 1966 of 120 children born to women denied abortion were reexamined.
  • (15) Infectious meningitis in adults was reviewed to establish the frequency of meningitis due to each causative agent and to reexamine the laboratory parameters that help to distinguish aseptic, bacterial, and mycobacterial meningitis.
  • (16) The literary data on the reexamination of the holotype are given.
  • (17) The histological outcome at surgical reexamination was correlated with the current neopterin levels (P = 0.016).
  • (18) The pigs were killed 28 or 44 weeks postoperatively, and the aortas were reexamined.
  • (19) Thus the possible significance of the t(11;14) within B-cell disorders should be reexamined in the light of a more objective approach to classifying these diseases by morphology, histology, and immunophenotype.
  • (20) All 22 surgically repaired fractures in dogs available for physical and radiographic reexamination had healed within 1 to 6 months.

Words possibly related to "reconsider"

Words possibly related to "reexaminable"