Dictionary
reprise
verb
To take (something) up or on again.
synonyms
Exact(8)
"All in all, a reprise of last year's oil crisis seems unlikely".
Women seem particularly attuned to seeking out not partners but rehabilitation projects, though there are plenty of men who reprise the pillar of strength routine when they could do with support themselves.
Nick Clegg's pose as honest broker was a grating reprise of last time – and it felt bust.
Tim Vine Milton Jones's only rival for the title of Britain's punner-in-chief takes to the road with a reprise of his 2014 Edinburgh fringe show, Tim Timinee Tim Timinee Tim Tim to You.
Added to everything, we had a reprise of boxing's greatest controversy: the "long count" from the Dempsey-Tunney fight of 1927.
The clear Labour commitments on tax have undermined Tory efforts to reprise the success of their 1992 election campaign when the party warned that the then shadow chancellor John Smith was planning a series of tax "bombshells" on middle Britain.
Related: Islam Karimov set to reprise presidential role as Uzbekistan heads to the polls This will be his third term under the current constitution, even though that same treaty limits presidents to two terms, an Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe observer mission noted in a report.
In a sign that No 10 is planning to reprise the tactics of the Thatcher and Major era, when the Tories depicted Labour as a dangerous force on the left, the prime minister denounced Ed Miliband for embracing a "damaging, nonsensical, twisted economic policy".
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