rehaul
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]rehaul (third-person singular simple present rehauls, present participle rehauling, simple past and past participle rehauled)
- (transitive) To haul again.
- 1921, United States. War Dept. Claims Board, Decisions of the Appeal section, volume 5, page 485:
- Certainly there is nothing in the letter to obligate the Government to pay for the rehauling of the 3,421 tons of coal from the storage point to the claimant's powerhouse.
- (transitive) To overhaul.
- 1998, John McCannon, Red Arctic, page 62:
- Almost immediately, however, trouble with the throttle forced the ship to make a short stop in Copenhagen, site of its manufacture, to have its engine rehauled.
- 2005, Jessica Bird, Beauty and the Black Sheep:
- She glared at the exposed pipes over her desk. Plumbing that needed to be rehauled.