See also: reenter and re-enter

English edit

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

reënter (third-person singular simple present reënters, present participle reëntering, simple past and past participle reëntered)

  1. Rare spelling of reenter.
    • 1900, Booker T[aliaferro] Washington, “Helping Others”, in Up from Slavery: An Autobiography, New York, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page & Co., published 1901, →OCLC, page 66:
      To my gratification he told me I could reënter the institution, and that he would trust me to pay the debt when I could.
    • 1913, Henry Gray, Anatomy, Descriptive and Applied, new American/18th English edition, Philadelphia, New York: Lea & Febiger, page 762:
      It consists chiefly of intersegmental fibres which arise from cells in the gray substance, and, after a longer or shorter course, reënter the gray substance and ramify in it.
    • 1922, D[avid] H[erbert] Lawrence, “Introduction”, in Fantasia of the Unconscious, New York, N.Y.: Thomas Seltzer, →OCLC, page 11:
      I am almost ashamed to say, that I believe the souls of the dead in some way reënter and pervade the souls of the living: so that life is always the life of living creatures, and death is always our affair.
    • 1933, Nathanael West, Miss Lonelyhearts, London: Picador Classics:
      The cripple returned the smile and stuck out his hand. Miss Lonelyhearts clasped it, and they stood this way, smiling and holding hands, until Mrs. Doyle reëntered the room.

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