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re-enforce
verb
To enforce again; to re-emphasize.
Exact(12)
Three new exhibitions re-enforce that.
They are looking for someone to help re-enforce the importance of Christmas to them.
Normally, honor and loyalty re-enforce each other; in bad times, they can come suddenly into conflict.
I don't see the very deep prejudice of male superiority lessening nearly as much; it has even been reconfirmed when fundamentalists of various religions re-enforce it.
But in the era of the two moons, the parties enjoy periodic election victories they don't deserve, which only re-enforce their worst habits.
They want to re-enforce their message to Bulgaria's politicians: an end to vertiginous and voracious oligarchical power and the normalisation of Bulgarian politics.
In one of the few sketchy accounts, the Roman historian Livy noted that a king in Anatolia hired Celts as mercenaries to re-enforce his own army.
The election of several new moderate Democrats to the House and Senate, from battlegrounds like Florida and New Hampshire, could re-enforce centrist tendencies.
Politicians, professionals and the media should always be mindful that when they buy into, and re-enforce, stereotypes they contribute to a culture of disbelief and silence.
Results from this study also re-enforce similar conclusions.
And it uses GIFs to re-enforce that fact.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com