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单词 re-enact
释义

Definition of re-enact in English:

re-enact

verb riːɪˈnaktˌriəˈnækt
[with object]
  • 1Act out (a past event)

    再次展现(过去的事件)

    bombers were gathered together to re-enact the historic first air attack

    轰炸机集结在一起,准备再次展现历史性的首次空袭。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Celebrations of the 100th anniversary of the Wright brothers' first powered flight were marred today when an attempt to re-enact the event did not go according to plan.
    • In Limbo, a marooned family on an island discover the diaries of those stranded there a hundred years before and start to think of themselves as re-enacting their experience.
    • The Who singer Roger Daltrey presents ‘Extreme History’ on US TV, re-enacting episodes from the American Civil War in full costume
    • They playfully re-enact events and change details to match personal needs and desires.
    • Years later, at the 2000 Vancouver International Film Festival, I sat with many of the same people to see the premiere of Scorn, which re-enacts the events surrounding the murders.
    • As a new film re-enacts these bizarre events, John Harris reveals how he became obsessed by this Harvard student with country music in his blood
    • Noren implies that, on both the familial and political level, we are doomed to re-enact the past.
    • The clocks were turned back exactly 150 years in historic Haworth to re-enact the wedding of one of Britain's favourite classical authors.
    • Its roots lie in ‘living history’, that hobby indulged in by thousands who dress up as Roundheads, Cavaliers and all the rest to re-enact bloody episodes from our history.
    • Dr Dahiya along with scientific officer MN Joshi, re-enacted the incident with a railway coach at the same spot where the crime took place.
    • A pageant is held at the nearest weekend, together with a fête and associated events, and the wedding is re-enacted by children.
    • Today's Dresden Stollen Festival, which has been celebrated every year since 1994, re-enacts the historical event of the giant stollen, with a 3,500 kilogram cake shown at the Dresden Zwinger.
    • He returned to the site of the Feb.28 incident the next day in order to re-enact the events.
    • We have to re-enact the event the way it happened.
    • We were going to say something funny and trenchant, but we were re-enacting an Irish funeral service at the pub last night, and so are in no shape to respond.
    • A lesser film would have merely re-enacted the events of Goya's life and shown you his art; Saura manages to portray their intersection.
    • Every year they re-enact the death of the legendary vampire Zorbeskel, who plagued the cobblestoned streets of vieux Lyon back in the days when it was Nouveau Lyon.
    • A Gordon Bennettt Company has been set up with the idea of re-enacting the famous race with the cars of that era, while using the original race circuit as a hook to market the greater area.
    • When a local television crew came to the home to refilm the incident, the toddler somehow managed to re-enact the accident with unerring accuracy.
    • Numerous small theatres throughout Salem re-enact episodes from the witch trial hysteria while waxwork displays in creepy dungeons capture the key moments.
    Synonyms
    recreate, build up a impression of, build up a picture of, form a impression of, form a picture of, piece together, build up
  • 2Bring (a law) into effect again when the original statute has been repealed or has expired.

    重新制订(法律);重新颁布(法令)

    section 3 of the Act re-enacted the form of strict liability formerly found in the Dogs Act
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Emergency Provisions Act of 1973, which introduced these courts, also repealed the Special Powers Act while re-enacting many of its provisions.
    • Our people's Parliament, in the Criminal Code Act and Crimes Act, have re-enacted those words into law.
    • Long ago, Sir Owen Dixon pointed out that it is quite artificial to think that Parliament in re-enacting legislation is giving it the same meaning that courts had attributed to it in earlier cases.
    • The provisions as to exempt supply were re-enacted as section 31 of, and schedule 9 to, the Value Added Act 1994.
    • Section 43 was re-enacted in materially the same form in section 56 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990.
    • Some basic laws, such as the Queensland criminal code and mining laws, were re-enacted in Port Moresby.
    • Part III of the Act re-enacted the provisions which had been contained in the 1977 Act in relation to the duties owed to the homeless.
    • There is now a piece of legislation which re-enacts, substantially, the relevant provisions of the Customs Act.
    • Then there was a further enactment subsequently that re-enacted that provision.
    • Clause 37 re-enacts law that has been in place and worked well since 1977, and makes no change to the existing law.
    • The relevant provisions in the 1970 Act were re-enacted in substantially similar terms in Part II of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973.
    • Section 19 of the Local Government Finance Act 1982 re-enacts section 16 of the Local Government Act 1972.
    • Further, many significant English statutes affecting private law were re-enacted here, producing local uniformity and access to a body of valuable English decisions construing those statutes.
    • Hooper and other prominent Protestants were held in custody until the heresy laws could be re-enacted.
    • The wording of the subsection was virtually identical to the comparable wording in the 1875 Act and by re-enacting the old wording Parliament is presumed to have affirmed the decision in Parlby.
    • This was formally recognised in 1986, when the racial hatred offences were re-enacted, and expanded, within the framework of the Public Order Act.
    • We were told that although the legislation with which these proceedings are concerned had been repealed, it had been re-enacted in an identical form.
    • If one simply re-enacts the current law it will have no effect at all on the Court of Appeal decision.
    • Georgia relied, in part, on the fact that, in the years after the Furman decision, numerous state legislatures had re-enacted death penalty statutes.
    • Some legal experts believe that South Africa currently has no electoral law, since it expired after the last election, and that new legislation would first have to be adopted, or Parliament would have to re-enact the original law.

Derivatives

  • re-enactor

  • noun
    • The public appreciate the added value of seeing re-enactors and the opportunity to compare their equipment with genuine items on display.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Over 650 re-enactors dressed in authentic costume, as well as military vehicles and equipment from the era, will colour the whole line through Pickering, Levisham, Goathland and Grosmont.
      • In August, re-enactors will launch a keelboat in the Ohio River to retrace the 2,000-mile Lewis and Clark expedition, which started in Pittsburgh.
      • Tudor re-enactors will perform a masque with singing, dancing, music and storytelling in the Painted Hall of the Old Royal Naval College, in Greenwich, at 2pm on Saturday and Sunday.
      • Last month re-enactors staged a mock battle at the site, as a testing ground before the full festival on September 23 and 24 next year.

Definition of re-enact in US English:

re-enact

verbˌrēəˈnaktˌriəˈnækt
[with object]
  • 1Act out (a past event)

    再次展现(过去的事件)

    bombers were gathered together to re-enact the historic first air attack

    轰炸机集结在一起,准备再次展现历史性的首次空袭。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A Gordon Bennettt Company has been set up with the idea of re-enacting the famous race with the cars of that era, while using the original race circuit as a hook to market the greater area.
    • Numerous small theatres throughout Salem re-enact episodes from the witch trial hysteria while waxwork displays in creepy dungeons capture the key moments.
    • We have to re-enact the event the way it happened.
    • A lesser film would have merely re-enacted the events of Goya's life and shown you his art; Saura manages to portray their intersection.
    • When a local television crew came to the home to refilm the incident, the toddler somehow managed to re-enact the accident with unerring accuracy.
    • Its roots lie in ‘living history’, that hobby indulged in by thousands who dress up as Roundheads, Cavaliers and all the rest to re-enact bloody episodes from our history.
    • A pageant is held at the nearest weekend, together with a fête and associated events, and the wedding is re-enacted by children.
    • Celebrations of the 100th anniversary of the Wright brothers' first powered flight were marred today when an attempt to re-enact the event did not go according to plan.
    • Dr Dahiya along with scientific officer MN Joshi, re-enacted the incident with a railway coach at the same spot where the crime took place.
    • Today's Dresden Stollen Festival, which has been celebrated every year since 1994, re-enacts the historical event of the giant stollen, with a 3,500 kilogram cake shown at the Dresden Zwinger.
    • Years later, at the 2000 Vancouver International Film Festival, I sat with many of the same people to see the premiere of Scorn, which re-enacts the events surrounding the murders.
    • Noren implies that, on both the familial and political level, we are doomed to re-enact the past.
    • They playfully re-enact events and change details to match personal needs and desires.
    • Every year they re-enact the death of the legendary vampire Zorbeskel, who plagued the cobblestoned streets of vieux Lyon back in the days when it was Nouveau Lyon.
    • As a new film re-enacts these bizarre events, John Harris reveals how he became obsessed by this Harvard student with country music in his blood
    • We were going to say something funny and trenchant, but we were re-enacting an Irish funeral service at the pub last night, and so are in no shape to respond.
    • He returned to the site of the Feb.28 incident the next day in order to re-enact the events.
    • In Limbo, a marooned family on an island discover the diaries of those stranded there a hundred years before and start to think of themselves as re-enacting their experience.
    • The clocks were turned back exactly 150 years in historic Haworth to re-enact the wedding of one of Britain's favourite classical authors.
    • The Who singer Roger Daltrey presents ‘Extreme History’ on US TV, re-enacting episodes from the American Civil War in full costume
    Synonyms
    recreate, build up a impression of, build up a picture of, form a impression of, form a picture of, piece together, build up
  • 2Bring (a law) into effect again when the original statute has been repealed.

    重新制订(法律);重新颁布(法令)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The wording of the subsection was virtually identical to the comparable wording in the 1875 Act and by re-enacting the old wording Parliament is presumed to have affirmed the decision in Parlby.
    • Our people's Parliament, in the Criminal Code Act and Crimes Act, have re-enacted those words into law.
    • Then there was a further enactment subsequently that re-enacted that provision.
    • Some basic laws, such as the Queensland criminal code and mining laws, were re-enacted in Port Moresby.
    • The Emergency Provisions Act of 1973, which introduced these courts, also repealed the Special Powers Act while re-enacting many of its provisions.
    • Further, many significant English statutes affecting private law were re-enacted here, producing local uniformity and access to a body of valuable English decisions construing those statutes.
    • The relevant provisions in the 1970 Act were re-enacted in substantially similar terms in Part II of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973.
    • We were told that although the legislation with which these proceedings are concerned had been repealed, it had been re-enacted in an identical form.
    • Clause 37 re-enacts law that has been in place and worked well since 1977, and makes no change to the existing law.
    • Some legal experts believe that South Africa currently has no electoral law, since it expired after the last election, and that new legislation would first have to be adopted, or Parliament would have to re-enact the original law.
    • Georgia relied, in part, on the fact that, in the years after the Furman decision, numerous state legislatures had re-enacted death penalty statutes.
    • Long ago, Sir Owen Dixon pointed out that it is quite artificial to think that Parliament in re-enacting legislation is giving it the same meaning that courts had attributed to it in earlier cases.
    • If one simply re-enacts the current law it will have no effect at all on the Court of Appeal decision.
    • There is now a piece of legislation which re-enacts, substantially, the relevant provisions of the Customs Act.
    • This was formally recognised in 1986, when the racial hatred offences were re-enacted, and expanded, within the framework of the Public Order Act.
    • Hooper and other prominent Protestants were held in custody until the heresy laws could be re-enacted.
    • The provisions as to exempt supply were re-enacted as section 31 of, and schedule 9 to, the Value Added Act 1994.
    • Section 43 was re-enacted in materially the same form in section 56 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990.
    • Part III of the Act re-enacted the provisions which had been contained in the 1977 Act in relation to the duties owed to the homeless.
    • Section 19 of the Local Government Finance Act 1982 re-enacts section 16 of the Local Government Act 1972.
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更新时间:2024/9/21 17:53:57