0 past simple and past participle of redirect
1 to change the direction of something, especially to send a letter to a new address:
Meanwhile, other charities in the forest parishes were redirected to provide winter fuel for poor villagers rather than apprenticeships for young people.
The system of state schooling was sustained, but was redirected to other elitist ends influenced by the private education sector.
In this, they significantly redirected the relationship between financial and cultural change and in particular its role in the financial plots of novels.
In theory, all of this labor could be redirected into resource extraction.
This significant relationship indicated that when adults redirected infant attention, it was to motivate joint attention.
The ferrets could discriminate gratings presented to the part of the retina from which the projections had been redirected to the primary auditory cortex.
How could human behavior be redirected to accommodate modern conditions?
In summary, we have identified an existing drug that might be redirected for testing in neuropathic pain.