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reorientation
[ ree-awr-ee-uhn-tey-shuhn, -en-, -ohr- ]
Word History and Origins
Origin of reorientation1
Example Sentences
That means that “user wellbeing, trust, safety” are secondary without a reorientation, he says.
This is more a book of quick hits, a reference guide to dip into when readers need a little reorientation.
Getting there will require a wholesale societal reorientation of our relationship to wildfire.
He said that a 45-degree reorientation shouldn’t be a safety issue since the space station is designed to rotate 180 degrees.
Like many I spoke to, Williams seemed to desire a reorientation of policing, rather than just a reduction.
Even more significant, however, is the reorientation of anti-establishment politics that follows.
But the Middle East changed Stewart, and he needed to go through a little American reorientation.
Now, although I've mentioned reorientation before, what I actually know about it is meager.
Would you mind if I spent an hour in Psych for reorientation?
Comprehension then; reorientation; qualified relief—Is waking any better?
And Curt—he had had his reorientation at least several seconds before vanishing.
The miracle of his reorientation to belief, the new vistas that went with it.
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