Similar words: reenactment, enact, enactment, green as grass, in actual fact, menace, menacing, vena cava. Meaning: ['rɪːɪ'nækt] v. 1. enact or perform again 2. enact again 3. act out; represent or perform as if in a play.
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(1) Police officers re-enacted the crime in an attempt to get witnesses to come forward.
(2) Actors dressed in authentic costumes re-enact the battle.
(3) He re-enacted scenes from his TV series.
(4) The battle was re-enacted by actors in period costume.
(5) At the church, children re-enacted the Christmas story.
(6) Members of the English Civil War Society will re-enact the battle.
(7) This acting can range from pairs of students re-enacting a dialogue through to a simulation involving the whole class.
(8) He was mournfully re-enacting the conversation between two officials, as they debated the merits of revoking a pass-interference penalty.
(9) The little man would trot around, mumbling contentedly,(sentencedict.com) reenacting heroic skirmishes with rabid Orks in cramped subterranean Squattish strongholds.
(10) Now it's been re-enacted by enthusiasts from this country and abroad.
(11) Rene Russo re-enacts the true story of Gertrude Lintz, a socialite who nurses an infant ape to robust health.
(12) So then Hans Spemann sought to re-enact the principle that Loeb had demonstrated, this time with his favourite salamander embryos.
(13) Some have made pilgrimages to re-enact ancient rituals in caves, others have dressed in costumes and objects evoking traditional Goddess images.
(14) Only a fool would re-enact the drink-fuelled high speed car journey that killed Princess Diana.
(15) Thinking they were breaking with the past, the early Christians re-enacted it.
(16) It is impossible to say when Congress may re-enact the excise tax.
(17) My sister has enough knights strewn across history to re-enact Agincourt. Sentencedict.com
(18) We see this process of moving round re-enacted in the development of every young bony flatfish.
(19) Whereas conceptual art chooses to break the link between art and craft, it is this link that any painting re-enacts.
(20) Reenact this scene from memory with the same or random participants.
(21) The theory of reenact argues that individual spiritual growth goes on under certain order. It is a kind of cognitive reenacting of humankind cultural development process.
(22) They also reenact this dynamic in the workplace and in adult relationships.
(23) Cleopatra negotiated with Octavian to allow her to bury Mark Antony in Egypt. She wanted to be buried with him because she wanted to reenact the legend of Isis and Osiris.
(24) In the weeks following a traumatic event, preschoolers' play activities may reenact the incident or the disaster over and over again.
(25) Some of the curious bystanders cheer: how wonderful to reenact Yahweh's incomparable creation!
(26) The key lies in our reactions — how we reenact , or restructure internally, what others say and do.
(27) Each year, at Gettysburg, hundreds or thousands of Civil War buffs come together to reenact the battles here over four days of celebrations, education, weddings, and more.
(28) Once, after seeing an opera, Andersen came home and began to reenact the scenes, making up his own gibberish language.
(29) The fourth part: Based on the fundamental theory of reenact, I ponder over the compiling tactics of enhancing the language textbooks" interest."
More similar words: reenactment, enact, enactment, green as grass, in actual fact, menace, menacing, vena cava, tenacity, tenacious, menacingly, teenage, open account, tenaciously, teenager, preen, green, careen, tenaciousness, open an account, tureen, re-entry, screen, greeny, greens, superior vena cava, inactive, inaction, in action, greener.