Advertisement
Advertisement
restage
/ °ùŸ±ËËČőłÙ±đÉȘ»ćÏô /
verb
- to produce or perform a new production of (a play)
- to organize or carry out (an event) again, esp if it has been cancelled
attempts have been made to restage the race
Example Sentences
Ali will also restage some of her performances, previously shown around the world, throughout the spring in various locations around the city.
Before the dumping, hundreds of Bostonians will gather at the Old South Meeting House to restage the raucous gathering on Dec. 16, 1773, of citizens outraged by what they saw as illegitimate taxes and other oppressive measures imposed by the British.
Nolan goes deep and long on the building of the bomb, a fascinating and appalling process, but he doesnât restage the attacks; there are no documentary images of the dead or panoramas of cities in ashes, decisions that read as his ethical absolutes.
âOur benchmarks of professionalism include respect for our community and respect for and deference to our trial judge in such matters. Extrajudicial comment on attorney Brillâs motion to restage Nicolas Cruzâs murderous rampage compromises those benchmarks,â Piper said in a statement.
Back in 1967, the court applied its new First Amendment ârecklessnessâ standard to a family that suffered a home invasion and sought privacy, only for Life magazine to inaccurately restage the event on its entertainment pages.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse