Dictionary
the rediscovered
verb
To discover again; especially something previously lost or forgotten.
Exact(58)
Now Ballet Theater is waiting for Britten experts to weigh in on the rediscovered score.
Part of this normality, as many Germans see it, is the rediscovered right to patriotic pride.
Air only became aware of the rediscovered print when they were asked to create the soundtrack.
But the rediscovered Hudson is creating a rift of its own.
That is the rediscovered sense that progress is possible on problems once thought impervious to change.
(Fassbinder himself, in the rediscovered film footage, speculates freely on his films' wider societal implications).
The rediscovered score of "Chant de Libération" sheds new light on Honegger's attempts to improve his political position.
Thanks to the popularity of the rediscovered Philogelos jokes, English humor got shorter and punchier — that is to say, jokier.
He also approved of the plan to complete the unfinished cathedral in Cologne according to the rediscovered original drawings.
The rediscovered world has an inhospitable appearance, and suddenly anxiety seizes her: she hasn't got the car key!
The rediscovered intimacy suits him – there's a bracing directness to these songs that's been lacking over the last decade.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com