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"reappraisal" Definitions
  1. the act of examining something again to see if it needs to be changed

135 Sentences With "reappraisal"

How to use reappraisal in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "reappraisal" and check conjugation/comparative form for "reappraisal". Mastering all the usages of "reappraisal" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The latter would occasion a reappraisal of, well, everything. Scary.
The 20th century brought a reappraisal and later, renewed appreciation.
Phil Witmer thinks Korn are long overdue for a reappraisal.
Dissenting shareholders can only ask for a reappraisal of the price.
This week, we felt a reappraisal of Houston was in order.
It is time for a radical reappraisal of the Olympic Games themselves.
But he also promised a reappraisal after Bangladesh's general election on December 30th.
Put another way: To the living we owe justice, to the dead reappraisal.
For Nintendo, that meant a reappraisal of how the gaming giant approached mobile gaming.
In practise, this means a reappraisal of the communications strategy for some Unilever brands.
America threatened an "agonising reappraisal" of relations if France voted against the defence treaty.
The results left me convinced that pot roast is overdue for a mass reappraisal.
Injuries hit the N.B.A. hard last week, necessitating a reappraisal of certain foregone conclusions.
Could it be time for a reappraisal of Maths + English and the standard it set?
The reappraisal of Appel is in a sense following two different directions on two different continents.
Mr. Ellis doesn't feel entirely vindicated by the reappraisal of the novel as a sharp satire.
One finding of particular interest is a reappraisal of the presence of megafauna in mountainous regions.
It was only a matter of time before Dungeons & Dragons became part of that reappraisal-slash-reawakening.
Are you surprised that this old style of heavy metal is enjoying a bit of a reappraisal?
They have now undergone a reappraisal of the role of clothing and home furnishings in Late Antiquity.
Stanley McChrystal, recently wrote thoughtfully about his own reappraisal of Lee's legacy as a man and a leader.
The BBC recently ordered another documentary that will serve as a reappraisal of Jackson's career and final days.
With the opposition candidate Tsai Ing-wen favored to win Saturday's presidential election, such ideas could face reappraisal.
Shout, a memoir and reappraisal of her ground-breaking book about sexual assault, comes out on March 12.
Brussels sprouts have of late been undergoing a tide of critical reappraisal lately, which is frankly all wrong.
In 1978, Issac Bashevis won the Nobel prize for literature, prompting a reappraisal of writing in Yiddish more generally.
The broadest-ranging consequence of the DFS industry's lobbying efforts may be to prompt a reappraisal of PASPA itself.
During this time of reappraisal, some textbooks may need to be rewritten, and some egos will be badly bruised.
Each of them managed, before their deaths, to enjoy a cultural reappraisal, to regain their mark of cultural approval.
The Quad's retrospective — which will be followed by a more conventional Sapphic-vampire series — offers an opportunity for reappraisal.
Yet reappraisal of the author's texts in the 1910s and 1920s cemented Melville in the firmament of great American authors.
You mention one paper on "anxiety reappraisal," which is about how we can tell ourselves that anxiety is actually excitement.
"For people who suffer from extreme nerves before a performance, the takeaway from the reappraisal research is clear," he writes.
I remember telling a girlfriend in the early 2000s that the Gizeh thong sandals for women were due for reappraisal.
But this could be changing amid rising interest in food from the Middle East and a reappraisal of European roots.
A reckoning for serial predators in Hollywood has turned into a nuanced reappraisal of sexual ethics, female desire and agency.
"['Little Women'] somehow acts as both a reappraisal and slight reinvention of Alcott's work while remaining a gorgeous tribute to it." 
At the same time, he has done nothing to bring about an urgently required reappraisal of the Republicans' stale economic agenda.
The shift didn't happen because of some mass reappraisal of the evidence; it's just that tribal orthodoxy shifted and everyone followed.
We are well overdue for a radical reappraisal over who controls the vast troves of data currently locked down by technology incumbents.
Laura Dassow Walls's new biography is a compelling study that dispels both these notions, revealing an enigmatic American writer worthy of reappraisal.
It's less a temporary rupture than a searching reappraisal of what a status-quo superpower should do about an ambitious, formidable challenger.
We're covering impeachment testimony in Washington, a reversal of U.S. policy on Israeli settlements and a reappraisal of the artist Paul Gauguin.
One band that's seemingly escaped the music internet's frequent reappraisal (Migos is better than the Beatles, 2Pac actually sucks, etc) is Fleetwood Mac.
The events across three acts (and as many hours of playing time) leave open for reappraisal just who is the caretaker of whom.
The Vaccine Book and other skeptical tomes (such as Vaccines: A Reappraisal) also happen to rank among Amazon's best-selling books on vaccines.
It is a reappraisal of this kind that lies behind a general upward drift in euro-zone bond spreads in recent weeks (see chart).
But there appears to have been a reappraisal since the start of the month amid signs this positioning had overshot on the bearish side.
There is no grand evolution, just an endless process of rediscovery and reappraisal, as various styles and poses go in and out of fashion.
WeWork's botched IPO then triggered a sharp reappraisal of WeWork's value, pushing banks that made a large loan to Neumann to consider new terms.
Rising prices most likely reflect hedge funds covering some short positions rather than a fundamental reappraisal of the outlook for supply, demand and inventories.
The blazing intensity of her sister's mental illness consumed Helen's childhood, and serves as the focal point for her current reappraisal of family history.
"There are a lot of risks, so it makes sense that there is a bit of a reappraisal as we move into summer," said O'Donnell.
"Following Carillion's collapse, it was generally assumed that there would be a radical reappraisal of the public sector's approach to construction/infrastructure procurement," Klein added.
What has me so keen to play BattleTech anew with the Flashpoint update is that it promises to force a reappraisal of how combat looks.
By refusing to focus on the crimes that launched this existential reappraisal, she treats them as dignified individuals rather than props in a voyeuristic entertainment.
Mr. Sheader's vital reappraisal of one of Mr. Lloyd Webber's and Tim Rice's earliest works is scheduled to return to that address in the summer.
" — SETH MEYERS Stephen Colbert hopes that this Brexit special, which he filmed in England over the weekend, leaves him with "three years of agonizing reappraisal.
Self-care strategies and reappraisal are both well and good, but if the organization is toxic, unyielding in its demands, that objective reality can't be ignored.
The stock has risen about 28% YTD, but we think that is more to do with the decline in credit spreads than a reappraisal of fundamentals.
Same goes for people like Tarantino and Edgar Wright—they're art house filmmakers, but they've been actively calling for a reappraisal of exploitation cinema since the 1990s.
But in both cases, this reappraisal came about mainly because they each had critical as well as cultural clout: They were seen as "real" musicians, serious artists.
A less-noted problem is that America's unthinking reverence for its fighters is forestalling a badly needed reappraisal of how it organises its forces, and to what end.
"He took a long, hard look at his past decisions, did some agonising reappraisal, and realised that in his heart, he'd really like to be president," said Colbert.
Though he has been largely written off as a character actor, one who only could play variations on squawking wiseguys like Tommy, his career has long begged for reappraisal.
This week on the Still Processing podcast Wesley Morris and Jenna Wortham offer up a reappraisal of her work and a reminder of her brilliance — a love letter, really.
Last year, Nicola L. was featured in The World Goes Pop, the Tate Modern's reappraisal of Pop Art, and A Modest Proposal, staged by Hauser & Wirth in New York.
This important reappraisal is testament to the fact that just because certain artists are left out of the historical record does not mean they did not produce historically significant work.
Temple joined several other major U.S. universities that have taken back honorary degrees since Thursday's verdict, reflecting a broader reappraisal of the 80-year-old comedian's place in American culture.
Sharona Muir Perrysburg, Ohio Sibling Rivalry Although I thoroughly enjoyed reading Joan Acocella's reappraisal of "Little Women" (Books, August 27th), my relationship to the book's characters is different from hers.
" Alison de Lima Greene, the curator who oversaw the Rothko retrospective at the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston last fall, said the dark paintings "are in for a reappraisal.
Iveković, who also engaged with found advertisements and television commercials, could be usefully compared with Warhol for her black-and-white, handmade, critical reappraisal of Monroe and the mass media.
In keeping with the exhibition series' focus on reappraisal, Good Muse tackles several issues contemporary audiences find redolent throughout Rodin's oeuvre — and art history generally — namely identity, agency, and the gaze.
More broadly, it is unwise to think that Mr Biden's long-ago working-class roots are a substitute for the serious reappraisal of economic policy that the Trump insurgency makes urgent.
In Brooks' research, for instance, she found that "anxiety reappraisal" allowed subjects to not only perform better on singing and math tasks, it also changed their orientation to the stressful future event.
And while the subsequent two films in the series were met with a comparatively mixed reception, they've each received a considerable amount of reappraisal in recent years — as has Keanu Reeves himself.
When the intense cold of early January caught the hedge fund bears sleeping, it forced a reappraisal of the supply, demand and stocks situation going into 2018 and an upward correction in prices.
Gareth: We must've recorded it only four months after Hold On Now, Youngster… came out and at that point I wanted some sort of reappraisal of the band almost immediately after we existed.
Europe already possesses a security blanket, formally known as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (a military alliance that could use "a reappraisal" itself, as Barry Posen argued recently in The New York Times).
" Moira Donegan, the writer best known for creating an online list of alleged sexual abusers and harassers in media, recently wrote an appreciative reappraisal of Dworkin occasioned by "Last Days at Hot Slit.
For that study, Israeli researchers taught half their participants a technique called cognitive reappraisal — basically a method to challenge your negative emotions, question how they originate, and then watch them dissipate among that introspection.
Pence also likely explained that the UNRWA decision represents not just budget bean-counting, but a fundamental reappraisal of UNRWA itself, with a view to ending U.N. support of hereditary refugee status for Palestinians.
The lease has no reappraisal provisions, meaning that his company still has 961 years left on a lease requiring annual payments of less than a million dollars, even as real estate values have soared.
Each of them has written a powerful reappraisal of the pass that many liberals gave to Bill Clinton during his impeachment saga, and the consequences of that pass as we enter the #MeToo era.
Burunbana's clairvoyance echoes the slant reappraisal of the past in "Counternarratives," one that proceeds not along the vector of generations — each a kernel containing the next — but the strange byways of identities in flux.
"We think that one of the major factors that is leading to a scaling back of long positions is a reappraisal of short-term fundamentals by investors," Standard Chartered analysts said in a note.
Inferno was not the surprise box-office hit that Suspiria was — it didn't even get a wide release in the US — but the film has earned a cult following and critical reappraisal over the years.
The Bard Music Festival, which began last weekend and continues through Sunday, makes the case for a reappraisal, with a series of performances and lectures that illuminate his role in forging a Russian national style.
And so, despite Michael responding to his years of media dogpiling and his eventual outing by embracing his sexuality and his role within the gay community, his career — until now — never got that cultural reappraisal.
By the mid-1970s, Day had been dismissed as a goody-two-shoes and the leader of Hollywood's chastity brigade, but the passing decades have brought a reappraisal, especially by some feminists, of her achievements.
Conceived together with his longtime collaborator, the creative director Beda Achermann, it is more than just another pretty volume to decorate your ottoman with — for Halard, it is a deeply personal reappraisal of his pictures.
It was a great pleasure, therefore, to witness the outstanding reappraisal of Brecht's "The Good Person of Szechwan" with which the Moscow Pushkin Drama Theater visited the Barbican in London for three performances this month.
For that study, Israeli researchers taught half of their participants a technique called cognitive reappraisal — basically a method to challenge your negative emotions, question how they originate, and then watch them dissipate among that meta introspection.
Ms. Tillman said that the housing agency was committed to giving residents fair prices for their properties and that owners were entitled to a reappraisal at the agency's expense if they were dissatisfied with an offer.
Both films are among the early hits of Rialto Pictures, founded by the Film Forum programmer Bruce Goldstein with the goal of releasing restorations from the canon (and, in some cases, forgotten films worthy of reappraisal).
Since Tim Burton's affectionate 1994 biopic, "Ed Wood," starring Johnny Depp, Mr. Wood has been the subject of a critical reappraisal of sorts, with defenders casting the director's crude productions as a kind of outsider art.
In a reappraisal of the period in his recent book "Music After the Fall," an essential survey of contemporary music, the British journalist Tim Rutherford-Johnson identifies this spiritual minimalism as a kind of marketing gimmick.
After Dopethrone, the Wiz' started to further experiment with ever more hypnotic material, and while both 2002's Let Us Prey and 2004's We Live are not particularly highly-regarded albums, both are worthy of reappraisal.
But given all that's happened in the industry in the three and a half years since the handset's release, maybe it's time for a reappraisal of the Fire Phone and what it meant for Amazon's hardware division.
Almeida Theater, London Robert Icke has worked his transformative magic on Shakespeare ("Hamlet"), Schiller ("Mary Stuart") and Chekhov ("Uncle Vanya"), but his reappraisal of Ibsen's darkest play just may represent this English director's finest achievement to date.
Sarah A. Schnitker, an associate professor of psychology and neuroscience at Baylor University and a leading researcher on the topic of patience, suggests using a powerful technique called cognitive reappraisal, which means thinking about a situation differently.
Because a thousand genuine moments aren't worth a single manufactured one to WWE, whether the genuine moment is the sincere, overdue reappraisal of Cena after his losses to Styles or the unfulfilled potential of Strowman beating Lesnar.
And so Nancy Argentino becomes a footnote, with Snuka the same hero taking on Roddy Piper he was in 1984, just as you'll hear echoes in the corners of pro wrestling asking for a reappraisal of Chris Benoit.
" In conferring the prize, the administrators of the National Book Award praised the biography as a "searching and perceptive reappraisal of a major literary figure," calling it an "honest, moving, and beautifully balanced work — a truly distinguished portrait.
The drug-fuelled nihilism and graphic on-stage sex made headlines, but the most interesting side of his work has always been the themes of abuse, the corrupting influence of power and the reappraisal—and repercussions—of historic acts.
From the 1960s to 1980s, the federal government's failed efforts to reduce crime, which resulted from bad data collection, bad social science and bad police practices, led to an expansion of the carceral apparatus rather than a serious reappraisal.
A May report from the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission noted the new law could trigger a reappraisal of the United States-Hong Kong Policy Act of 1992, which defines the territory as a separate entity to China.
"The successful attack surely forces a reappraisal [of] the risk to, and the cost of, preserving the physical security of these assets," said Hasnain Malik, the Dubai-based head of equity strategy at Tellimer, an investment bank focused on developing markets.
A British Afro-Caribbean multimedia artist, Ms. Boyce was a founding member of the black arts movement in Britain and a pioneering teacher whose work has been the subject of a recent "later-career reappraisal," according to Ms. Stella-Sawicka.
In a 50th anniversary reappraisal of Brown published in The Journal of Negro Education, a researcher familiar with that period spoke of how white communities regarded the arrival of even a few black teachers as an attack on their schools.
His 1988 National Theater play, "Mountain Language," for instance, may have been inspired by the plight of the Kurds, but the director Jamie Lloyd's stinging reappraisal of it here brings to mind the separation of immigrant families at the United States border.
Reflective of this is the way in which many artists go about their work in a seasonal, cyclical way: a period of going deep in the studio followed by a period of public exhibition followed by a period of rest and reappraisal.
BERLIN, Sept 25 (Reuters) - Former German finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, the mastermind behind Berlin's "black zero" budget policy of not taking on new debt, has called for a reappraisal of its fiscal policy to meet the challenges arising from climate change and digitalisation.
The reappraisal came after researchers found that the spy group showed itself capable of rapidly exploiting multiple "zero-day" bugs - previously unknown software glitches that leave security firms no time to defend against attacks, John Hultquist, FireEye's director of intelligence analysis said.
The report listed a catalog of mistakes, saying the war was poorly-resourced, badly-planned and in the turmoil that followed the invasion, there was a total failure to conduct a reappraisal of policies with the only strategic objective to cut troop deployment numbers.
Brett Anderson is the restaurant critic for The Times-Picayune of New Orleans, but this week he's on the cover of our Food section with a paean to pot roast, a dish of his Midwestern youth that he says is due for a mass reappraisal.
But some reviews of Chernow's new biography praised it as a thorough and insightful reappraisal of Grant, who was in truth an original and discerning military strategist, possibly the most influential in the history of the United States, and a brave and decent president.
This exhibition, which follows on the heels of solo exhibitions at Tilton Gallery in 2014 and 2016, along with his inclusion in historical surveys, are steps that I hope will culminate in a vast and necessary reappraisal of his work and place in art history.
That's leading to reappraisal of what's good value in G2114.86 as well as emerging markets," said Peter Kinsella, head of research at Commonwealth Bank of Australia "Second is oil prices - OPEC are talking of further supply cuts which shows they are finding it hard to balance markets.
The Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act ought to be the mere beginning of reparation for and reappraisal of Flint, and yet most of us will breathe a sigh of relief simply to see a few corroded pipes ripped out of the ground and replaced.
For all this reappraisal, the Arab world today is a far cry from the early 1950s, when Egypt's first president, Muhammad Naguib, went to synagogue on Yom Kippur and Muslims prayed next to Christians and Jews at the graveside of Moses Maimonides, a medieval rabbi, in Cairo.
Although this series celebrates the production company's 120-year history with some favorites from the canon — including Max Ophüls's "The Earrings of Madame de …" (Saturday and Wednesday) — it makes room for titles that are relatively disreputable or ripe for reappraisal, such as Joseph Losey's 1982 feature, "The Trout" (Aug.
The value of works by Wifredo Lam, for instance, has doubled or even tripled in the last decade because of a reappraisal of his place in art history, said Isabelle Bscher, the third-generation owner of Galerie Gmurzynska, which has represented artists including Yves Klein, Joan Miró and Picasso.
There's also a look at the nature of authoritarian leaders, a reappraisal of Wendell Willkie's 1940 run for president, and Adrienne Rich's "Essential Essays" — a posthumous collection from a towering poet whose nonfiction drew in equal measure on her capacious heart and mind to engage with art, culture and politics.
So he wandered the world for the rest of his life, looking for a home, for other tribes, for people who ate not because of A Percolating National Reappraisal of Pigs Ears, but because they are hungry, and it's time to eat, would you like some, come in, sit with us.
" But meanwhile, his fall has inspired a critique not only of his behavior but also his life's work, with three female historians writing in The Forward that his sexual sins should prompt a larger reappraisal of "the troubling gender and sexual politics long embedded in communal discussions of Jewish continuity and survival.
At the root of the postelection reappraisal, economists and investors contend, is the view that Republican control of the Senate and House, as well as the White House, will put an end to the divisive politics of the Obama years that prevented his administration from taking more direct steps to stimulate the economy.
But what was most compelling were the nine sections — beginning with the struggle for decolonization from the 1940s through the 80s in many Southeast Asian countries, to more recent concerns with democracy, freedom of expression, and the reappraisal of identity by a current tech savvy generation — that mapped the ASEAN countries' (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) remarkable art scene.
It's important to remember, too, that this is the same playhouse where Ms. Cracknell caused a stir in 2012 with her thematically shape-shifting reappraisal of Ibsen's "A Doll's House" (subsequently seen in New York in 2014) and the bare-bones "A View From the Bridge," directed by Ivo van Hove, that is on Broadway now.
Cultural cornerstones like The Simpsons and Sex and the City have come under a previously non-existent spotlight; the ball-scratching Judd Apatow figure has been supplanted as comedy royalty by the urgency of Donald Glover, Jordan Peele, and Amy Schumer; even cows as sacred as Larry David have found themselves subject to the odd ultra-enlightened reappraisal.
Although this series celebrates the production company's 120-year history with some favorites from the canon — including Max Ophüls's "The Earrings of Madame de …" — it makes room for titles that are relatively disreputable or ripe for reappraisal, like Joseph Losey's 1982 feature "The Trout" (Saturday), starring a young Isabelle Huppert in a role originally intended for Brigitte Bardot.
Although this series celebrates the production company's 20153-year history with some favorites from the canon — including Max Ophüls's "The Earrings of Madame de …" — it makes room for titles that are relatively disreputable or ripe for reappraisal, like Joseph Losey's 1982 feature "The Trout," starring a young Isabelle Huppert in a role originally intended for Brigitte Bardot.
That tragedy brought fresh urgency to a reappraisal of public monuments that was underway in many Southern communities, including New Orleans, whose mayor announced within days of the massacre that he planned to relocate four Confederate memorials that were built to celebrate a time when black citizens were not fully human in the eyes of the state.
Instead, four distinct bodies of paintings from different periods, along with four oil on canvas monochromes from 1973 and 1974, are dispersed across the gallery's two floors; they reveal her career-long investigation and reappraisal of what exactly a painting is, marked by intellectual rigor, a careful analysis of and extraordinary feeling for colors and materials, and a rhythmic, repetitive, and precise handling of paint.
"Businesses are backed in order to become self-sustaining businesses, and whilst in the US we've seen probably a slowdown — or certainly a reappraisal of the investment rate, over the last few months by the VCs, and that's partly been because of the amount of money the companies are burning and they're considering what they need to do with those businesses — here, for us, it's all about building sustainable businesses that are able to take advantage of the situation," he tells TechCrunch.

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