Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Dictionary: RED-IN-TE-GRA'TION – RE-DOUND'
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- Renovation; restoration to a whole or sound state. – Decay of Piety.
- In chimistry, the restoration of any mixed body or matter to its former nature and constitution. – Coxe.
RE-DIS-BURSE', v.t. [redisburs'; re and disburse.]
To repay or refund. – Spenser.
RE-DIS-POSE', v.t. [s as z; re and dispose.]
To dispose or adjust again. – Baxter.
RE-DIS-POS'ED, pp.
Disposed anew.
RE-DIS-POS'ING, ppr.
Disposing or adjusting anew.
RE-DIS-SEI'ZIN, n. [re and disseizin.]
In law, a writ of redisseizin, is a writ to recover seizin of lands or tenements against a redisseizor.
RE-DIS-SEI'ZOR, n. [re and disseizor.]
A person who disseizes lands or tenements a second time, or after a recovery of the same from him in an action of novel disseizin. – Blackstone.
RE-DIS-SOLVE', v.t. [redisolv'; re and dissolve.]
To dissolve again.
RE-DIS-SOLV'ED, pp.
Dissolved a second time.
RE-DIS-SOLV'ING, ppr.
Dissolving again.
RE-DIS-TRIB'UTE, v.t. [re and distribute.]
To distribute again; to deal back again. – Cotgrave.
RE-DIS-TRIB'U-TED, pp.
Distributed again or back.
RE-DIS-TRIB'U-TING, ppr.
Distributing again or back.
A dealing back, or a second distribution.
RED-LEAD, n. [red-led; red and lead.]
Minium, a salt composed of one equivalent of deutoxyd of lead, which performs the functions of an acid, and two equivalents of protoxyd of lead, which performs the functions of a base. Its proper chimical name is diplumbate of lead.
RED'LY, adv.
With redness.
RED-MARL, n.
New red sandstone.
RED'NESS, n. [Sax. readnesse. See Red.]
The quality of being red; red color. – Spectator.
RED'O-LENCE, or REDO-LEN-CY, n. [from redolent.]
Sweet scent. – Boyle. Mortimer.
RED'O-LENT, a. [L. redolens, redoleo; red, re and oleo, to smell.]
Having or diffusing a sweet scent. – Sandys.
RE-DOUB'LE, v.i. [redub'l.]
To become twice as much. The argument redoubles upon us. – Spectator.
RE-DOUB'LE, v.t. [redub'l; re and double.]
- To repeat in return. Spenser.
- To repeat often; as; to redouble blows. – Shak.
- To increase by repeated or continued additions. And Etna rages with redoubl'd heat. – Addison.
RE-DOUB'LED, pp. [redub'ld.]
Repeated in return; repeated over and over; increased by repeated or continued additions.
RE-DOUB'LING, ppr. [redub'ling.]
Repeating in return; repeating again and again; increasing by repeated or continued additions.
RE-DOUND', v.i. [It. ridondare; L. redundo; red, re, and undo, to rise or swell, as waves.]
- To be sent, rolled or driven back. The evil, soon / Driven back, redounded as a flood on those / From whom it sprung. – Milton.
- To conduce in the consequence; to contribute; to result. The honor done to our religion ultimately redounds to God, the author of it. – Rogers.
- To proceed in the consequence or effect; to result. There will no small use redound from them to that manufacture. – Addison.