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reorder
[ ree-awr-der ]
reorder
/ ːˈɔːə /
verb
- to request (something) to be supplied again or differently
- to arrange, regulate, or dispose (articles) in their proper places again
Example Sentences
President Trump’s executive order seeking broad changes to how elections are run in the U.S. holds the potential to reorder voting, even as it faces almost certain litigation.
The reordering of the global economic order is on hold, and Trump's promise of a golden age of American manufacturing will have to wait.
While the president has every right to reorder his priorities, the intelligence community should not weight threats more significantly based on the president’s perceptions or wishes.
It is a radical reordering of the global trading system by a president who is clueless about how any of this works.
If the tariff on American whiskey is imposed next month, Spiegel worries that his European importers might slow their rate of reorders, leaving him with lower sales and excess inventory.
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