Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
She proposes a reconception of both strategy and care.
He stated that the experiment "represents a reconception of our project's basic aim".
"We're not talking about the breakup of anthropology, but the reconception of its central concepts."
It is a subset and reconception of Labanotation sharing a common lexis.
A made-for-television reconception of the original film was released in 2012 on SyFy.
It is only through the radical reconception of language use prefigured here that she is able truly to break with the traditional novel.
At one extreme is Calvino who views technology as the occasion for a radical reconception of the act of reading.
So the program fell a bit flat in its reconception, and at Thursday evening's opening concert the uninspired performances did little to redeem it.
That definition was a product of the Bauhaus and its reconception of domestic life for the age of the machine.
But a major reconception of transference and its application to day-to-day life - attention to questions "about the way one should live" - doesn't come to pass.
But will it actually be "nothing short of Apple's reconception of personal computing," as Gruber opined?
The cemetery is typical of those that reflect Queen Victoria's reconception of the early 19th century "graveyard".
The Joyce program is new and is billed as "a reconception of a typical Odissi recital."
The identifying signs of this change - a radical reconception of what makes for feminine pulchritude - can be readily enumerated.
The catalytic figure in the Comden-Green reconception might find this nostalgic impulse interesting, in a beard-stroking way.
In Considered Judgement, Elgin argues for "a reconception that takes reflective equilibrium as the standard of rational acceptability."
"It's the definitive reconception," said Maynard Solomon, who has written extensively about Beethoven and is currently concentrating on Mozart.
This combination of success and challenges prompted a reconception of the Women and Social Movements website in the spring of 2002.
You certainly don't want watered-down imitations of originals; on the other hand, a radical reconception of a major part can throw a production out of kilter.
That would be Mr. Wolfe's bold reconception of "The Tempest" as a parable of colonialism.
The cur- rent project actually began as an investiga- tion of electricity and magnetism, which, Einstein suddenly announced one day, would require a reconception of time.
Rashin thought that with re-education Man might rid himself of his reconception and take as easily to adjusting Time to his requirements as he adjusts nature.
Justice Ginsburg's elegant reconception of the 18th-century text epitomizes the vision of mainstream, equal-treatment feminism that she championed as an advocate and an academic in the 1970's.
The "reconception" part comes in when you consider how many people really need the power-and the complexity that comes with it-of a desktop platform, and in what situations.
This is a radical reconception (Dryden's spoken text eliminated entirely) that transforms a patriotic drama with pastoral interludes into a fantasy about Restoration eroticism.