Dictionary
is reinstituting
verb
To institute for a second or subsequent time
Exact(1)
As you may have guessed, Hedges' No. 1 priority is reinstituting a nationwide ban on alcohol.
Similar(59)
But if and when the draft is reinstituted, I wonder whether the posteverything generation will find Internet-based political groups and letter writing an adequate outlet for their outrage.
If there is any evidence of recurrent extra‐renal TMA then eculizumab is reinstituted.
If the patient develops signs of poor tolerance, weaning is considered to have failed and mechanical ventilation is reinstituted.
That policy would be reinstituted.
He was forced to leave Heidelberg when Lutheranism was reinstituted under the elector Louis VI (1576 83).
He promised that, if confirmed, waterboarding would never be reinstituted on his watch.
Announcer: Huh? McCall: "That's a tax that I think could and should be reinstituted".
The tax was repealed in 1902, only to be reinstituted in 1914 at the rate of 1 cent per call.
All blocks expire 90 days after they are set, but they can be reinstituted by revisiting the Spam Controls page.
Both systems were reinstituted in West Germany in 1950; a law of 1976, however, reduced the number of Schöffen.
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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