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reassimilate
verb
To assimilate again.
Exact(4)
And to Leicester to blood new signings Jamie Gibson and Blaine Scully and reassimilate England internationals Flood, Tuilagi, Ben Youngs and Geoff Parling after assorted lay-offs.
When the show ended, Marvel said, it was disorienting to work again with more conventional directors: "I remember Neil Armstrong talking about what it was like when he returned from space, how it took him a very long time to reassimilate.
Nature was the key idea; in response to the regimented styles and modes of corporate life, a movement was afoot to reassimilate humanity to nature, and the styles of clothing and grooming (as well as attitudes toward sexual desire) reflected this ideal, even if in a way that itself rapidly became a part of culture and fashion.
They make him sleep and gain weight "I wondered how I would ever reassimilate myself into the mainstream of American life".
Similar(4)
Not the least of their achievements has been reassimilating Pietersen into the team.
After a long break, traditional gang culture is reassimilating into hip-hop, owing in no small part to the increasing strength of Los Angeles rap.
By presenting a group in which no dissent is tolerated – at intervals we see dancers break away and dance independently, but they are soon reassimilated – Shechter seems to be making a statement about totalitarianism, and enslaved, entranced souls.
The two main characters are soldiers who were badly mutilated there and are beginning the process of reassimilating.
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