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realign
/ ˌriːəˈlaɪn /
verb
- to change or put back to a new or former place or position
Example Sentences
The Rams offense is not the same when the running game suffers, but Kyren Williams thinks the attack is getting realigned to face the Patriots.
In his sobriety, Franco said he has realigned his life.
In his first speech since becoming Scottish Tory leader on Friday, Russell Findlay called on the Parliament to "realign" with the public and said that too many people felt "detached" from the chamber.
Such a reset in the relationship would mean economic changes, "realigning financial flows from destruction to regeneration".
One came via a video posted on social media, when he invoked Abraham Lincoln and said “we must realign ourselves with the founding spirit of our nation.”
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