1 to examine a situation or activity again in order to make changes to it, for example in order to make it more modern or effective: --
2 to change a calculation of the financial value of something, for example because of increases in price or interest rates: --
The County Assessor said his office is attempting to reappraise all buildings in the county this year at current construction costs.
However, they leave us less adequately prepared to consider diachronic, historical changes in linguistic value as words are reappraised within contexts of economic, political, and ideological transformation.
For the second criterion, each house was reappraised to assess the proportions governing the shape of its respective principal rooms - halls, dining rooms and drawing rooms.
Women poets "exposed, reappraised, and circumvented ideologies felt as constraining" he says.
The future use of the drug should then be reappraised.
The established complexities may even extend beyond our a priori knowledge to interpret them, thereby signalling a need to reappraise our hypotheses.
Confounded by that discovery, they eventually reappraised their explicit axiology.
In the same vein the concept of "tradition" has also been reappraised.
This book then forms part of a series of publications reappraising the nature of both community care and institutional provision.