[ verb ] assemble once again, after taking something apart <verb.creation>
Reassemble \Re`as*sem"ble\ (r[=e]`[a^]s*s[e^]m"b'l), v. t. & i. To assemble again.
"If this was Elvis week, somebody would show up and buy it piece by piece and reassemble it at home," Isom said.
"We'll go back tomorrow, our team is ready to reassemble," he said.
Coniston has been waging a slow-moving campaign to reassemble a transaction ever since.
Investigators seeking the cause of a steam explosion that killed three people began Sunday to reassemble the pipe that erupted under a Manhattan street in a 15-story geyser of 400-degree gas and mud.
That's a vicious circle in which you can run around for a long time. 'The only way around that is to find all the factors that have gone into the success of what you have done before and then reassemble or recycle them into some new undertaking.
In the broadcast, the skeptical television reporter asked the uniformed officer how long it would take experts to reassemble the tangled masses of snapped wires at the Dorobanti telephone exchange. "About three days," the officer conceded.
It has to be done completely and reassemble the pieces into a whole new structure," the popular weekly quoted him as saying.