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: --
They constantly reinvented themselves to suit the moment-not unlike their gosain partners.
In other words, genetic programming succeeded, in the earlier work, in reinventing a previously patented invention.
The skin can be reinvented for each project - and is thus effectively tailor-made.
Section 5 then shows that six 21st-century patented inventions can be reinvented by genetic programming.
We are constantly reinventing our traditions in the various stories we tell ourselves about ourselves, incorporating new experiences and material.
To make meaningful comments on the fiction as it reflects, expands upon, reorients, or reinvents the life is to provide a psychological context.
Once compiled and easily available, these tables would free successive generations from the empirical task of reinventing the wheel, so to speak.
The being of the trajectory can be reinvented if we restore gravity's force, its reality-producing power.