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The phrase "alter it again" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when referring to making a change or modification to something that has already been changed previously.
Example: "After reviewing the feedback, I decided to alter it again to better meet the project's requirements."
Alternatives: "modify it once more" or "change it again."
Exact(1)
The chairman of Liberty, John C. Malone, may want to alter it again so the company can get UnitedGlobalCom stock at a lower price, diluting the value of investors' shares because more will have to be issued to pay Liberty, analysts say.
Similar(59)
It's not uncommon for blogs to write something quickly if there is a breaking story, and then flesh it out and perhaps even alter it a bit later, but again, this is the WSJ, and not their blog — this presumably is an article that will run in the paper tomorrow morning.
The cyprid then undergoes metamorphosis into a juvenile barnacle, and it can never again alter its location.
On the way she contemplates how a church makes a community for a space of time, then disperses it again, its constituent parts altered by the experience.
Letting it sit out for long periods of time uneaten, and then chilling it again might alter the taste.
To produce them, he made a rough charcoal drawing, photographed it, altered the drawing slightly, photographed it again, and so on.
Should he do precisely that the chatter around McIlroy will alter once again.
It was initially assumed by Melbournes bridge crew that Voyager was conducting a series of tight turns to lose speed before swinging behind Melbourne, but Voyager did not alter course again.
In doing so it has altered once again the management of agrobiodiversity in terms of conservation and use possibilities, as well as the landscape of actors involved.
But a review of the most recent state exam, given in August, reveals that they did it again, this time altering Franz Kafka and sanitizing Aldous Huxley.
For a sequence that would take hundreds of computer-drawn cels in a Pixar film, Kentridge used a single charcoal drawing, altered and rephotographed again and again.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com