0 If you do something afresh, you deal with it again in a new way:
1 again, esp. from a new beginning
As a consequence, we are in a position to trace afresh the publication history of much nineteenth-century literary work.
We have to discover everything afresh, as all the facts elicited by the first analysis have disappeared, while the general knowledge of is intact.
The finch's capacity to use spines is not inherited, but rather learned afresh by each individual.
The story may be revised afresh each time they tell it as they reflect on how coherent it is in the light of their worldview.
This condition cannot pass through a singlecelled stage such as an egg, so must arise afresh in each generation.
What is striking, re-reading or coming afresh to this body of writing, is both its breadth and the style of its communication.
They seem to be thinking afresh while the interview is in progress, at times reflecting on their own thinking process.
Throughout these studies one can appreciate afresh the author's depth of scholarship, his concise and graphic expression, and his analytical skills.