(v. t.) To furnish with a new mast or set of masts.
Example Sentences:
(1) Breakdown of LP by rumination was calculated from the weight of total particles regurgitated and the proportion of LP in the regurgitated and swallowed remasticated material.
(2) The man who found the deleted scenes is movie sleuth and champion of lost causes, Darren Gross, who works in MGM's technical services department (which archives, preserves, restores and remasters the studio's movies).
(3) The first, on a “remastered” version from 1999, sounded underwhelming: compressed, light on bass, palpably small.
(4) In 1999 the remasters of Pokémon Gold and Silver came with pedometers to train your Pokémon on the go.
(5) We are also very excited about the release of new and remastered music from one of his greatest masterpieces."
(6) In return, we're sending the Russians drama from Shakespeare's Globe, dance from the Royal Ballet and nine remastered Hitchcock silent films.
(7) So didn't it take him back, remastering all these classics?
(8) When Marr remastered the Smiths' back catalogue two years ago, he emailed Morrissey (along with all his ex-bandmates) saying he could hear the love in the music, but didn't hear back.
(9) As part of the new deal, a digitally remastered deluxe edition of Prince’s classic album Purple Rain will be released to mark its 30th anniversary.
(10) It sounded good, but I'm sure a remastered download would sound better.
(11) By coincidence, I had just bought one of their supposedly remastered vinyl albums and been so repelled by the sound – thin, full of pops and crackles and excessive sibilance – that I had taken apart my turntable, in search of a fault that was actually in the grooves.
(12) Uncharted: The Nathan Drake Collection is an anthology of remastered PlayStation 3 games (optimised for 1080p resolution and an improved frame-rate), the oldest of which is less than seven years old.
(13) Wags immediately reimagined the teaser with incongruous CGI aliens, in a reference to the remastered Special Edition versions of the original Star Wars trilogy.
(14) Each has found a way to be part of musical history without being trapped by it and to be as much themselves as those eccentric individuals from the 60s whose recordings are constantly being remastered and boxed up and celebrated.
(15) His remastered Godzilla finds the behemoth battling man-made goliaths while Aaron Taylor-Johnson strives (one assumes in vain) to maintain order.
(16) Such a flurry of excitement forgets the fact that existing fans will no doubt have bought the remastered CDs, and ripped them to their computers; the question is whether there is a new group of music-lovers so used to buying digitally that this move will introduce them to the band for the first time.
(17) HOW CAN YOU REMASTER SOMETHING THATS ALREADY [BEEN] MASTERED,” he tweeted late on Friday night .
(18) News on that category and more of the pre-ceremony award winners below: • Neil Tesser won best album notes for his work on Afro Blue Impressions (Remastered and Expanded).
(19) Ablation of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex resulted in postoperative deficits in all subjects, although 6 of 8 eventually remastered the task.
(20) The DVD sides provide the same albums remastered in multi-channel Dolby 5.1 and DTS (Digital Theater System) surround sound.
Repast
Definition:
(n.) The act of taking food.
(n.) That which is taken as food; a meal; figuratively, any refreshment.
(v. t. & i.) To supply food to; to feast; to take food.
Example Sentences:
(1) The trailer used to be the hors d’oeuvre before the main course; now it’s being treated as a significant repast in its own right, a sort of antipasti before we get stuck into the spaghetti alle vongole.
(2) We are cheered when we observe the vulture feeding on the carrion which disgusts and disheartens us and deriving health and strength from the repast.