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Verb

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re-man (third-person singular simple present re-mans, present participle re-manning, simple past and past participle re-manned)

  1. Alternative form of reman
    • 1825, William Goldsmith, The Naval History of Great Britain from the Earliest Period, page 326:
      The French, seeing things in this confusion, brought to, and lay by their own disabled ship, re-manned and took her into tow.
    • 2011, Christopher Priest, The Separation:
      Now back in the UK, based at Tealby Moor, the squadron itself was being re-manned and re-equipped, this time with the Wellington night bomber.
    • 2012, Tom Rosendahl, Integrated Operations in the Oil and Gas Industry, page 213:
      On the Norwegian shelf, where re-manning has been done at higher levels than in many other regions, nearly 50% of Baker Hughes' staff who would traditionally have been offshore can be re-manned during operational peaks – this means they are either in an office onshore, or their responsibilities have been changed.

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