0 past simple and past participle of redeploy
1 to move employees, soldiers, equipment, etc. to a different place or use them in a more effective way
As a result, vast financial resources were increasingly secured and redeployed to construct military and naval machines of unprecedented size, complexity, and cost.
In severe circumstances troops were redeployed to protect badly hit mines and estates.
In one case the device was partially withdrawn and immediately redeployed, but it remained unsatisfactory.
If production were limited and excess inputs redeployed, then some portion of the rent could be collected through taxation or the sale of fishing rights.
Materials and forms from the surrounding site are redeployed in the design, but misplaced in order to elicit reconsideration of the context.
For instance, the special efficiency budget for retraining and supporting redeployed public-sector employees can be seen as part of a general effort to provide a safety net.
This academic knowledge in turn is thus constantly used and redeployed in both the public arenas outside universities and research institutions and within the military itself.
Are funds saved on near-market research to be redeployed on basic research in the biological sciences?