0 to give someone a different job or position:
They will be reassigned to other duties in the department.
He has shaken up the department, reassigning staffers.
The cuts have been handled through attrition and reassigning tasks to remaining employees.
One option could be to reassign unused phone numbers from rural areas to urban areas.
His physicians considered reassigning him back to female, which would have been surgically more feasible.
The applicant must provide a birth or citizenship certificate in their reassigned gender.
1 to give an employee a different job, or to arrange for an employee to work in a different place:
2 to decide that a legal matter will be dealt with by a different judge or police department:
The Justice Department took the unusual step of reassigning the investigation.
be reassigned to sb By order of the Appeals Court, the case will be reassigned to another judge.
The fact that the latent vowel receives stress during truncation demonstrates that stress is reassigned after truncation.
Sound morphing is achieved by interpolating the time-varying frequencies, amplitudes and bandwidths of corresponding partials obtained from reassigned bandwidth-enhanced analysis of the source sounds.
More importantly, the librarian reassigned the shelf number of the second book at the end of this very inventory.
In the face of change, hill-climbing can proceed as normal, pausing only to reassign variables whose assigned elements have been removed.
With the formation of the perfective, however, stress is reassigned in both forms and the supposedly unstressed latent vowel receives stress.
At the onset of motion, the star ting locations of the dots were randomly reassigned.
With this much at stake, permission to reassign material to different categories was likely to be an institutional decision.
The bipartition identified by the tree reassigns 5 individuals.