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View definitions for reinstitute

reinstitute

verb as in continue

verb as in reintroduce

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Example Sentences

The order from Emil Bove, the acting deputy attorney general, did not address the merits of the case against Adams, a Democrat, and noted that the department would reserve the right to reinstitute the charges after New York City's mayoral election in November.

From BBC

If Trump’s public statements and the actions of his first administration are any guide, the new administration appears poised to expand detention facilities, attempt to reinstitute family separations, end programs like temporary protected status, deputize state and local officials and members of the military as immigration officers, and attempt to eliminate or limit the right to asylum for individuals fleeing persecution.

From Slate

Mr. Trump has promised to reinstitute an executive order he issued late in his term known as Schedule F, which would empower his administration to convert tens of thousands of civil servants to so-called at-will employees, who could more easily be fired.

He has threatened to weaponize the Justice Department against his political opponents, gut the civil service system to replace professional federal employees with loyalists, invoke the Insurrection Act to put down protests, reinstitute his ban on Muslim immigration and incarcerate millions of immigrants in detention camps.

According to the lawsuit, it was the academy commander who had instructed the training staff to reinstitute “old school” policies and a more “military” style of training at the academy.

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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