redesignate
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]redesignate (third-person singular simple present redesignates, present participle redesignating, simple past and past participle redesignated)
- (transitive) To designate again.
- 1988 April 16, John F. Harding, “Homophobic Merry-Go-Round”, in Gay Community News, page 5:
- What happens when I arrive somewhere is they isolate me and notify the Regional office they want me transferred. The Regional takes a couple months to redesignate me, and when I get to the new place the same thing happens again.
- 2003, Farhat Iftekharuddin, Joseph Boyden, Postmodern Approaches to the Short Story, page 139:
- The four chapters of Davenport's work generally follow the same scheme. Adriaan calls section one "An Erewhonian Sketchbook" and uses a Napoleonic rather than a Gregorian calendar redesignating the months Messidor (July), Thermidor (August), and Fructidor (September).
- 2017 June 29, Jennifer Hansler, “These are the bills Trump signed into law in his first year as President”, in CNN[1]:
- “This bill redesignates the Martin Luther King, Junior, National Historic Site in the state of Georgia as the “Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historical Park.” The bill replaces the current boundary map with a map of a proposed boundary revision dated June 2015.”
- 2023 June 2, Kaanita Iyer, “US Army renames Fort Bragg as Fort Liberty”, in CNN[2]:
- Last month, Fort Hood in Texas, another major military installation, was redesignated Fort Cavazos, in honor of Gen. Richard Edward Cavazos, a veteran of the Korean and Vietnam wars who became the first Hispanic person to wear four stars on his uniform.
Spanish
[edit]Verb
[edit]redesignate
- second-person singular voseo imperative of redesignar combined with te