reappropriation in the PONS Dictionary

reappropriation Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

reappropriation of budgetary funds

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
The grammar of human smuggling is, in life as in art, an extended montage of reappropriation and recontextualization.
creativetimereports.org
At the same time, we realize that every reappropriation is constrained and even guided by contemporary concerns and biases.
en.wikipedia.org
Fashion loves reappropriation and reinvention, taking some past garment and making it work in a modern context.
fashion.telegraph.co.uk
It's a reappropriation of language and action, and a step towards broader inclusion, participation and a greater deliberative democracy.
drownedinsound.com
A self-preservation style of singing, in other words, allowed his timbre to float freely across several decades, opening up any number of reappropriation possibilities.
theconcourse.deadspin.com
The press release is a colourful reappropriation of the facts.
www.wired.co.uk
My address to "everyone" does not include this type of reappropriation.
www.pensionplanpuppets.com
It entails the submission of received understanding to critical reappropriation for the purpose of human emancipation.
en.wikipedia.org
With the reappropriation of pink, millennial women have turned the dictate back into a choice.
www.bloomberg.com
The pirate label, which had been used by the media and film industries in campaigns against copyright infringement, is therefore a reappropriation of the word.
en.wikipedia.org

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