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.
Infection and premature rupture of the membranes signs of infection appear should be reappraised as a treatment option.
Should we or should we not agonizingly reappraise, on a worldwide basis, our philosophies of expansion and growth?
Even those genes for which a function can be assigned must be reappraised and the function defined when acting in concert with the cellular patterns.
First, the archaeology needs to be reappraised in some detail to answer these questions.
In any case, the authors had to frequently reappraise their ideas, update the text, and add new chapters.
Settlements' move away from 'residency' has been critical in reappraising their organisational goals.
It is perhaps in this context that we need to reappraise some of the expressions of loyalty found amongst westerneducated elites during the period.
This book then forms part of a series of publications reappraising the nature of both community care and institutional provision.