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Discover Ludwig'replan' is a correct and usable word in written English.
It means to make a new plan or revise an existing plan. It can be used when there is a need to change or adjust a previous plan, whether due to unforeseen circumstances or a change in goals. Example: Our team had to replan our marketing strategy after the budget was cut in half.
Dictionary
replan
verb
To plan again; to make a different plan
Exact(8)
Under King Zog I (reigned 1928 39), Italian architects were employed to replan the city.
Any embarkation could be a dead end, forcing me to retreat and replan my route.
For weeks, at the mercy of the vagaries of racing and wind, the crew had to plan and postpone and replan impromptu daily parties for 100 people or more in a club with no kitchen.
You have to replan, which is frustrating," said Gale Brewer, the Manhattan borough president.
It's why we get out of bed early in the morning, or replan our schedules to watch the action in Rio.
Ofcom was working with the industry to replan the DAB transmission areas, he said, with the aim of greater flexibility and cost savings.
Similar(27)
In 1669 he was appointed surveyor general of the royal buildings, replanning the entire city and supervising the building or rebuilding of 51 churches.Little is known about Wren's personal life.
In 1795 Absalom Martin of New Jersey laid out a town called Jefferson, which was later abandoned; his son Ebenezer replanned the site as Martinsville in 1835, but it was later renamed for his father's ferry.
The British biologist T.H. Huxley helped with the replanning on the scientific side.
In the 1780s and '90s he painted a series of oil sketches of the Grande Galerie of the Louvre as part of a proposed replanning.
Districts heavily bombed in World War II (69 percent of the houses were destroyed) were replanned and rebuilt.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com