0 to produce something new that is based on something that already exists:
1 to change someone or something so much that the person or thing seems completely new:
He promised to reinvent government if elected.
2 to change something in a basic way so that it works differently:
3 to change the way you behave or look so that people think of you differently:
4 to waste time and money in developing something that already exists:
The paper describes the approach and lists previously patented inventions that have been reinvented by genetic programming.
Section 2 demonstrates that a 19th-century patented invention in mechanical engineering and numerous 20th-century patented inventions can be similarly reinvented by genetic programming.!
In part, this is because fencing was reinvented as a defensive art, and as a skill that contributed to the development of a polite gentleman.
In most cases, however, the sardar continued on the journey, and reinvented himself as a foreman at destination.
They are treated as a music constantly reinvented and remembered for a period stretching over the impressive length of eight hundred years.
Classifications of the natural world abounded and distinctions between humans, animals, and plants were reinvented.
We now have contact with our neighbouring practices, it's good, we don't all go reinventing the wheel.
The being of the trajectory can be reinvented if we restore gravity's force, its reality-producing power.