(v. t.) To cut deeper, as engraved lines on a plate of metal, when the engraving has not been deep enough, or the plate has become worn in printing.
(v. i.) To enter anew or again.
Example Sentences:
(1) Passive avoidance performance of HO-DIs was, indeed, influenced by the age of the subject at the time of testing; HO-DIs reentered the shock compartment sooner than HE at 35 days, but later than HE at 120 days.
(2) Sixteen children (41%) subsequently relapsed, but all who reentered treatment became dry.
(3) The DNAs of two independent deletion mutants, dl-1007 (24% deletion) and dl-1003 (8% deletion), were used as templates for further DNA synthesis (i.e., they reentered replication) to a greater extent than was wild-type DNA.
(4) He reentered the hospital on December 21, 1983, because of personality change, mental deterioration and bradykinesia.
(5) Expression of histone genes, as assessed by Northern (RNA) analysis, was shown to increase promptly after the stimulation, brought about by fresh medium, that activates stationary-phase cells to reenter the mitotic cell cycle.
(6) After intensive chemotherapy, for each blast crisis, the patient reentered chronic phase with disappearance of both the inv(16) and the eosinophilia.
(7) Now, 'reentering the marketplace', it's all girls."
(8) USA 84:7948-7952, 1987): mutant cells cannot proliferate at the restrictive temperature when stimulated to reenter the mitotic cell cycle from stationary phase but are unaffected and continue proliferation indefinitely if transferred to the restrictive temperature during exponential growth.
(9) Since the AV node fibers normally do not discharge spontaneously, an atrial premature beat may find an alternative route through the node and reenter the atrium.
(10) Through education, the patient is armed with knowledge that enables him or her to reenter community life prepared to be as independent as possible.
(11) The vasectomy technique known as "Riddle's fiddle" is described as a foolproof method that prevents sperm from reentering the ejaculate.
(12) All five evaluable patients with myeloid blast crisis of chronic granulocytic leukemia reentered the chronic phase of their disease.
(13) In addition to providing evidence that some of the proteins of alpha granules may be of exogenous origin, this study has allowed the definition of a pathway whereby plasma proteins may be temporarily sequestered in megakaryocytes before reentering the circulation in platelets.
(14) Defending against his attraction, he pushed her away from him, did not act to keep her in analysis or allow her to reenter analysis later.
(15) When reentering treatment, the majority (75%) stayed for over 6 months and improved steadily in most areas.
(16) When such EB arrested myoblasts are released from EB inhibition they fuse without reentering the cell cycle.
(17) The designation of contraceptives as orphan drugs, with concomitant incentives, may be warranted to encourage private manufacturers to reenter the field.
(18) I don’t want to overthink it by saying, ‘Well, this is the eve of Olmert’s announcement of his reentering the race and he is someone who actually did quote-unquote “take care of Gaza”, he is someone who actually did eliminate a nuclear program instead of just talking about it.'
(19) Entry of virus into the bile may be an important mechanism by which an enteric virus that produces systemic disease reenters the intestine for transmission.
(20) When Normal Rat Kidney cells are allowed to reenter the cell cycle after quiescence they start to replicate DNA around 12 h, reaching a maximum at 20 h. Activation of DNA polymerase alpha parallels the increase in DNA synthesis.
Reinter
Definition:
(v. t.) To inter again.
Example Sentences:
(1) She wrote: “The reinterment of King Richard III is an event of great national and international significance.
(2) It is worth reinterating that percentiles mean nothing more than the proportion of children who had reached given heights at given ages when they, the standardizing population, were measured.
(3) Bishop Stevens acknowledged Richard’s “contested reputation’” to the Guardian, but insisted that it was a privilege for everyone in Leicester to be part of what he called “the great drama of Richard III’s reinterment … a moment when as a nation we can touch a critical moment in our story, recalling the intense conflict of the Wars of the Roses, and the fundamental shift in the monarchy of the late Middle Ages.” “In the great services that will mark his reinterment, we shall recall the events of Richard III’s life and death, we shall commend him to the mercy of God and we shall pray for the healing of the world’s conflicts in our own day.
(4) "This has been a major research project and we were always very clear from the outset that our intention was to reinter the remains in the cathedral," he added.
(5) The alliance, which was set up by the 16th great-nephew of Richard III, who had no direct descendants, favoured reinterment in York Minister, arguing it had been the wish "of the last medieval king of England" who was known as Richard of York.
(6) The reinterment ceremony will take place next spring.
(7) It was not a funeral but a reinterment, the dean of Leicester, David Monteith, reminded his congregation, because in 1485 Richard III did have a funeral, albeit hasty and improvised.
(8) They are now bound for reinterment in the nearby cathedral following a failed legal challenge by descendants who favoured York minster as his final resting place.
(9) Without the reminder that this was a reinterment, it might have looked like the grandest state funeral in living memory.
(10) Since then "passions have been roused and much ink has been spilt" over his life, death and place of reinterment", said Lady Justice Hallet, sitting with Mr Justice Ouseley and Mr Justice Haddon-Cave.
(11) Buried as a foreign menance more than twenty years ago, exhumed, examined and reinterred once or twice since then, brainwashing has risen again, this time to take its place on the stage of domestic horrors.
(12) Descendants of the family of Richard III , the last king of England to die on a battlefield, have lost a legal battle over where his recently discovered remains should be reinterred.
(13) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Members of the public gather outside Leicester Cathedral for the reinterment ceremony.
(14) Tsar Nicholas II was reinterred in St Petersburg 80 years after his execution.
(15) So while there is no longer any pretence that the unsettling facts can be reinterred, the new suggestion is that we learn to live with them.
(16) They were believed to represent the remains of the "Princes in the Tower" (who had disappeared in 1483), and were reinterred as such in Westminster Abbey.
(17) The Plantagenets have asked for the matter to be put out for consultation with the public, the Queen, English Heritage and themselves, buying time to further the case for reinterment in York.
(18) It will be reinterred at Saint-Denis next year with full state honours.
(19) Fast forward two years and, following a High Court decision, a reinterment was to be held on 26 March, broadcast live around the world.
(20) As car horns hooted outside his window, Leicester’s mayor, Peter Soulsby, told the Guardian: “We thought it couldn’t get any better 12 months ago when the eyes of the world were on us as we reinterred the bones of Richard III , but this is even better.