What is another word for reinterpret?

Pronunciation: [ɹˌiːɪntˈɜːpɹɪt] (IPA)

The term "reinterpret" is a verb that refers to the action of re-examining or reviewing something in a new light or perspective, with the aim of better understanding it. There are a plethora of synonyms that can be used in place of "reinterpret", including "reanalyze", "reconsider", "re-evaluate", "reassess", and "rethink". Other possible options include "reconstruct", "reconceptualize", "reword", and "rephrase". Each of these synonyms carries a slightly different connotation, and can be used depending on the context of a particular situation. Regardless of which synonym is used, the central idea is that of revisiting and potentially changing one's perception of a concept or situation.

Synonyms for Reinterpret:

What are the hypernyms for Reinterpret?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the hyponyms for Reinterpret?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.

Usage examples for Reinterpret

He earnestly desired to reinterpret Christianity in the new light of his time, yet perhaps no part of his work is so futile.
"Edward Caldwell Moore Outline of the History of Christian Thought Since Kant"
Edward Moore
When this analysis has been completed, we shall be able to reinterpret the phrase "identity of denotation," which remains obscure so long as it is taken as fundamental.
"Mysticism and Logic and Other Essays"
Bertrand Russell
Because that statement, with the authority of the House of Bishops that nobody has any business to change or reinterpret, carries with it a world underneath the surface of the earth to which the dead go down; and resurrection means coming up again from that underground world.
"Our Unitarian Gospel"
Minot Savage

Famous quotes with Reinterpret

  • The president appoints the judges. Your lives and your children's lives can change by all of these appellate court judges who will be appointed who will reinterpret laws, and things can change.
    Johnnie Cochran
  • Plato's dialogues are writings—books—too; like all books, once written, their words are fixed for all time and all readers. But because they demand that the reader interpret and reinterpret the meaning of what is said, going ever deeper in their own questioning and their own understanding both of the writings themselves and of the truth about the subjects addressed in them, these writings speak in a unique new way to the reader. It may remain true that only a mind, and no book, can contain the knowledge of anything important. But a Platonic dialogue makes a unique claim to do what a book can do to engage a person effectively in the right sort of search for truth.
    Plato

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