0 to organize a company, business, or system in a new way to make it operate more effectively -- 調整;改組;重建
It will be argued that multilingual education can only be successful if language teaching in general is restructured and oriented towards multilingual norms.
Words that are encountered many times or acquired early are more likely to become restructured than their rarer or later counterparts.
Recordings of older music can be restructured into new works to produce deliberate musical commentary on our past.
It then restructures the nested relation into a database of entries with associated organisms.
Options include changing the patient mix, reducing waste, reducing or eliminating nonessential functions, reducing capital expenditures, reducing or restructuring staff, or reducing salaries.
Indeed, the transition to corporatist arrangements is relatively advanced within a sector which has been forced to restructure in significant ways.
To be understandable, the latter phrase has to be restructured into information systems which are used for managing public supply chains.
Businesses were encouraged to steer their employees into more restrictive health plans by mandate and through restructuring their financial incentives.