reimpose

IPA: riɪmpˈoʊz

verb

  • To impose again, a further time.
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Examples of "reimpose" in Sentences

  • He will not reimpose the Business taxes of the 1990s to fund the excess Spending.
  • Broader measures are readily available: To start, Western governments could reimpose visa bans and asset freezes on senior Belarusan officials that were lifted in 2008.
  • The problem of Jim Crow in the South was a direct product of slavery – indeed it was a deliberate and concerted effort by Southerners to reimpose slavery in everything but name.
  • Even if he agreed to reimpose the settlement "freeze" that expired on September 26, construction would continue, as it has almost unabated during the past ten months, when the freeze was in effect.
  • At the same time, you are seeing in Tunisia that when you have an open competition for votes in a fairly pluralistic and complex society, the natural process of compromise comes through, as long as no one is allowed to take over and reimpose the former authoritarianism.
  • In an address before a joint session of Congress this year, President Felipe Calderon asked the United States to reimpose a ban on the assault-style rifles favored by Mexican drug cartels and to work harder to stop weapons flowing from gun shops and gun shows along the southwest border into Mexico.

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synonyms for reimpose
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