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单词 readapt
释义

Definition of readapt in English:

readapt

verb riːəˈdaptˌrēəˈdapt
[no object]
  • 1Become adjusted to changed conditions again.

    the limpets readapted to submerged life
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Motorists need to be especially careful until their eyes have readapted to the dark.
    • But Imron brushed aside assumptions that the failure might carry on to Busan, saying that they would need to readapt to each other after having been apart for some time.
    • He also took into account the presence of the couple's two children, but said that at the ages of nine and 11, and having spent only three years in this country, they would be able to readapt to life in Kosovo.
    • It has been exciting, though bittersweet, to see captive-born stallions - after so successfully readapting to the land of their ancestors - be dethroned by a generation of rivals that they sired.
    • There are other people with whose conscious theories God has interfered and very strongly, and then they have to readapt to a new reality.…
    • The Immigration Minister took the decision to send them back, saying the couple's two children were young enough to be able to readapt to life in Kosovo.
    • When reintroduced into the ancestral host, some lineages were able to reverse the changes, thereby readapting to the original host.
    • Another consideration here is that Joe takes several weeks to readapt.
    • She had to blink to readapt to the natural light when the track came into view.
    • Back in Groton, John soon readapted to colonial living.
    • The stripping away of history is informed, above all else, by a conceited impression of philosophy which is incapable of readapting itself to a context which resists certainty.
    • Is there a ‘point of no return’ - a period of time in microgravity conditions after which it is impossible for the human body to readapt to Earth's gravity?
    • I'm in Iran now, trying to readapt to regular life after spending two weeks in Peshawar, Pakistan, one week in a refugee camp close to Rawalpindi, Pakistan, and one week in Afghanistan itself.
    • The two are woven together by the common thread of trying to readapt to a normal life after a landmark experience.
    • I suggest that these connotations, reiterated and readapted in the context of Marian doctrine and female monasticism, are the key to Andrea del Sarto's altarpiece.
    • The population is given 10,000 generations to readapt to the new environment, during which its average fitness is monitored.
    • After a few months' training, the respiratory centre readapts automatically to the normal 6.5% level of carbon dioxide.
    • Additionally, bodybuilders following cyclical ketogenic diets would probably benefit from MCTs, since they have to readapt to ketosis every week after carb-loading phases.
    Synonyms
    restore to health, restore to normality, reintegrate, retrain
    1. 1.1with object Change (something) as a result of new or different conditions.
      she'll be the one readapting her life
      Example sentencesExamples
      • So simple supposition was readapted to model reference to common concepts or intentions.
      • Whatever method was used, I consider it would be no mere minor work to readapt the existing walls to comply with the approved layout.
      • Mankind's long experience has shown that it is possible to readapt a respiratory centre to increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the body by a process of training.
      • Little did Puccini suspect that his La Bohème would continue to be readapted ad infinitum.
      • However, when we readapted that program for use with romantic couples, some requested help in understanding how they could use forgiveness strategies to enhance their reconciliation.
      • The WHO recommends stronger animal surveillance and says China could readapt its anti-SARS watches to bird flu.
      • Because you are gay, and have grown up with a straight family in a straight world, you have to kind of adapt yourself and readapt yourself when you come out.
      • Many bands have tried to take a piece of classical music written for full orchestra and readapt it for rock music.
      • We'd either kill it, or we'd readapt it.
      • The same preparation was readapted in darkness and incubated with an appropriate concentration of wortmannin (dissolved in the medium by a series of dilutions of the stock DMSO solution), and the measurement was repeated.
      • These cars are different to any other car I have driven before, and you have to readapt your style and that takes time.
      • They could easily be readapted for military use so the Government needed this reassurance.
      • We have had to readapt our services, working with the psycho-social organizations.

Derivatives

  • readaptation

  • nounriːˌadapˈteɪʃ(ə)n
    • Perhaps these early birds still retained enough features of their terrestrial ancestry to facilitate a readaptation to ground life in appropriate ecological circumstances.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In question is no longer ‘merely’ the extermination of countless humans, but of the work of readaptation which can be undertaken on the very basis of the human.
      • They insisted on getting fair punishment, and the appointment of a team of lawyers as their consultants whose functions should involve assisting in social readaptation after their discharge from prison.
      • For it to work, you have to be more disciplined and systematic during the readaptation phase if you want to milk this program for all it's worth.
      • The key to protein cycling is to raise carbohydrate and healthy fat intake during the readaptation phase.

Definition of readapt in US English:

readapt

verbˌrēəˈdapt
[no object]
  • 1Become adjusted to changed conditions again.

    the limpets readapted to submerged life
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Another consideration here is that Joe takes several weeks to readapt.
    • There are other people with whose conscious theories God has interfered and very strongly, and then they have to readapt to a new reality.…
    • Is there a ‘point of no return’ - a period of time in microgravity conditions after which it is impossible for the human body to readapt to Earth's gravity?
    • The Immigration Minister took the decision to send them back, saying the couple's two children were young enough to be able to readapt to life in Kosovo.
    • The stripping away of history is informed, above all else, by a conceited impression of philosophy which is incapable of readapting itself to a context which resists certainty.
    • Motorists need to be especially careful until their eyes have readapted to the dark.
    • But Imron brushed aside assumptions that the failure might carry on to Busan, saying that they would need to readapt to each other after having been apart for some time.
    • The two are woven together by the common thread of trying to readapt to a normal life after a landmark experience.
    • After a few months' training, the respiratory centre readapts automatically to the normal 6.5% level of carbon dioxide.
    • I suggest that these connotations, reiterated and readapted in the context of Marian doctrine and female monasticism, are the key to Andrea del Sarto's altarpiece.
    • It has been exciting, though bittersweet, to see captive-born stallions - after so successfully readapting to the land of their ancestors - be dethroned by a generation of rivals that they sired.
    • The population is given 10,000 generations to readapt to the new environment, during which its average fitness is monitored.
    • She had to blink to readapt to the natural light when the track came into view.
    • When reintroduced into the ancestral host, some lineages were able to reverse the changes, thereby readapting to the original host.
    • He also took into account the presence of the couple's two children, but said that at the ages of nine and 11, and having spent only three years in this country, they would be able to readapt to life in Kosovo.
    • I'm in Iran now, trying to readapt to regular life after spending two weeks in Peshawar, Pakistan, one week in a refugee camp close to Rawalpindi, Pakistan, and one week in Afghanistan itself.
    • Back in Groton, John soon readapted to colonial living.
    • Additionally, bodybuilders following cyclical ketogenic diets would probably benefit from MCTs, since they have to readapt to ketosis every week after carb-loading phases.
    Synonyms
    restore to health, restore to normality, reintegrate, retrain
    1. 1.1with object Change (something) as a result of new or different conditions.
      she'll be the one readapting her life
      Example sentencesExamples
      • However, when we readapted that program for use with romantic couples, some requested help in understanding how they could use forgiveness strategies to enhance their reconciliation.
      • We have had to readapt our services, working with the psycho-social organizations.
      • Little did Puccini suspect that his La Bohème would continue to be readapted ad infinitum.
      • The WHO recommends stronger animal surveillance and says China could readapt its anti-SARS watches to bird flu.
      • Many bands have tried to take a piece of classical music written for full orchestra and readapt it for rock music.
      • We'd either kill it, or we'd readapt it.
      • The same preparation was readapted in darkness and incubated with an appropriate concentration of wortmannin (dissolved in the medium by a series of dilutions of the stock DMSO solution), and the measurement was repeated.
      • They could easily be readapted for military use so the Government needed this reassurance.
      • Mankind's long experience has shown that it is possible to readapt a respiratory centre to increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the body by a process of training.
      • So simple supposition was readapted to model reference to common concepts or intentions.
      • Because you are gay, and have grown up with a straight family in a straight world, you have to kind of adapt yourself and readapt yourself when you come out.
      • Whatever method was used, I consider it would be no mere minor work to readapt the existing walls to comply with the approved layout.
      • These cars are different to any other car I have driven before, and you have to readapt your style and that takes time.
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更新时间:2024/11/11 7:28:27