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.
In monetary accounts there is an item called revaluation, which takes into account the price differences between the beginning and end of the accounting period.
Then there is also the less dramatic possibility that a quiet revaluation of moral vocabulary is anyway going on.
Taxes to finance government-bond revaluation would have battered a society already facing high taxes for other post-war burdens.
Some revaluation was certainly both just and feasible, despite what debtors claimed.
This article thus contributes to the ongoing revaluation of the metropolitan commissioners of sewers and illustrates the constructed nature of statutory limitation.
Leaders and followers both rejected vehemently the claims of political and economic elites to expertise and authority on revaluation.
Such continuity in religious practice reflects the capacity of a religious worldview to adapt to change through a process of social discourse and practical revaluation.
But the revaluation of the nation-state is a result of disappointment too.