recreate
Word family
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++re·cre·ate /ˌriːkriˈeɪt/ ●○○ AWL verb [transitive] COPYto make something from the past exist again in a new form or be experienced again 使再现;使再次经历 SYN recapture You can never recreate the feeling of winning for the first time. 你永远无法再次体会第一次获胜时的心情。→ See Verb tableExamples from the Corpus
recreate• Arjelo's novel vividly recreates 15th-century Spain.• The trauma is still exerting an influence, but in the negative reactions it pushes against the trauma being recreated.• The second step in recreating a market economy is to restore private ownership of capital.• Fidelity is a dynamic, positive posture that needs renewing and recreating constantly.• And we can share best practices so that every educator and employer does not have to recreate effective strategies from scratch.• The talks I had with members of the group I recreated in my Conversations in Bloomsbury.• He has told friends that he intends to recreate the best bits of Neddy.• With those who reached him emotionally he recreated the rejections he had experienced as a young child.• As I do this, Miles and Evan often chime in, so we work together to recreate the story.re·cre·ate verbChineseSyllable
to again past in something the make exist Corpus from
recreate
re‧cre‧ate AC /ˌriːkriˈeɪt/
verb [transitive]
SYN recapture:
You can never recreate the feeling of winning for the first time.
re‧cre‧ate AC /ˌriːkriˈeɪt/
verb [transitive] Word Family: noun: creation, creativity, creator, creativeness; verb: create, recreate; adverb: creatively; adjective: creative ≠ UNCREATIVE
to make something from the past exist again in a new form or be experienced again SYN recapture: