re-create [
,ri:kri'eit]
vt. 重新创作
re-create
Re-create \Re`-cre*ate"\ (r?`kr?*?t"), v. t. [Pref. re- +
create.]
To create or form anew.
On opening the campaign of 1776, instead of
re["e]nforcing, it was necessary to re-create, the
army. --Marshall.
- It's about a Mexican farmer who helps re-create the passion of Christ during Lent, which leads to a crucifixion.
- But what supposedly sets this painting pachyderm apart is aesthetic intelligence, her evident use of color to re-create what she sees.
- Dunstrom was featured in a March 13 episode of the half-hour weekly series in which actors re-create real crimes and viewers are shown photographs and given information on fugitives and asked to provide tips.
- "They said they'd use water colors to mark up the trains and re-create graffiti and clean up afterward.
- "One of the factors making Detroit different is we have this constant influx of immigrants and they pull you back from assimilation," Abraham says. "They're always trying to re-create home." DETROIT: re-create home."
- "One of the factors making Detroit different is we have this constant influx of immigrants and they pull you back from assimilation," Abraham says. "They're always trying to re-create home." DETROIT: re-create home."
- There is great danger here, however, that Argentina will establish a complex regulatory structure that will only re-create more awkwardly the system of special benefits that generated the economic problems from the start.
- GFT is trying to re-create Italian flexibility at plants around the world and to diversify its products to meet different national tastes.
- But Mr. Homzy insists that isn't so: "We're not trying to re-create the sound of Ellington's band.
- Thousands of fans, many in antebellum costume, turned out to re-create the festivities surrounding the premiere of "Gone With the Wind" on the 50th anniversary of the release of the Civil War movie classic.
- The famed Paris cooking school Le Cordon Bleu is organizing a dinner in Washington to re-create the 1774 wedding feast of the Marquis de La Fayette, the Frenchman who helped the Americans win their revolution.
- The same accomplished cast of five re-create their roles here.
- A man dressed as Lincoln will re-create the actual speech.
- If Disney can build fantasy parks glorifying a make-believe mouse, Melvin Wilcox says Christians should be able to re-create Jerusalem in West Texas to tell the good news of Jesus Christ.
- Personal-injury lawyers, for instance, long have used chalkboards and toy cars to re-create collisions.
- These should be kept off the premises, in the bank or at the home of a member of staff, so that a physical accident cannot destroy both data on the machine and the back-up. A back-up system should enable a user to re-create his data if a failure occurs.
- You will re-create inflationary expectations, with the consequent profound effects on the workings of your economy.
- At the Everglades, hydrologists tinkering with water delivery for 10 years have been trying to re-create a natural rainfall-driven system they hope will bring wading birds, alligators, panthers, deer and fish to old haunts.
- "These oil platforms are a resource, and once they're gone nobody is going to spend the money to re-create them," says Paul Driessen, a rig-to-reefs advocate with the Interior Department's Minerals Management Service.
- "We're trying to re-create the ambiance of the real-life concert stage," explains Mr. Bogert, 42 years old.