English edit

Etymology edit

re- +‎ understand

Verb edit

reunderstand (third-person singular simple present reunderstands, present participle reunderstanding, simple past and past participle reunderstood)

  1. To reach a new or renewed understanding.
    • 1996, G. A. Pritchard, Willow Creek Seeker Services: Evaluating a New Way of Doing Church[1], Baker Books, →ISBN:
      A large part of the weekend service is designed to help people reunderstand who God is.
    • 2007, Brian Keenan, “The Tollund Men”, in Michael Marland, editor, Ideas, Insights and Arguments: A Non-fiction Collection, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 227:
      But as I came to know each of them in the confines of this room, I began to reunderstand that each man's humanity and capacity to love expresses itself in different forms.
    • 2010, Sebastian Junger, War, Twelve, →ISBN:
      It seemed to me like I either had to radically reunderstand the men on this hilltop or I had to acknowledge the power of a place like this to change men.

Anagrams edit