0 the act of calculating the value of something again, especially to give it a higher value than before:
1 the act of increasing the value of a country's currency in comparison with the currency of other countries:
A revaluation of the Euro now seems inevitable.
Further, virtually every party made campaign promises on revaluation it could not keep and often had no intention of keeping.
The revaluation of songs did not result in a lasting elevated literary status of the genre.
A third example could be a stock revaluation effect from a time-autonomous change in the terms of trade faced by a small natural-resource-exporting country.
The difference between the opening stocks and closing stocks adjusted for depletion gives the value of revaluation.
If this revaluation of the duality of architectural knowledge is the overidding challenge of the day, arq's arrival is timely and necessary.
Substantial revaluation for their debts would have further eroded their inflation-weakened competitive position.
Creditors complained that the parties used party discipline to force individual members of parliament who favoured substantial revaluation to vote for limited revaluation.
But the revaluation of the nation-state is a result of disappointment too.