Recast vs Restock - What's the difference?
recast | restock |
To cast or throw again.
*, I.47:
To mould again.
To reproduce in a new form.
* 1999 , Joyce Crick, translating Sigmund Freud, The Interpretation of Dreams , Oxford 2008, p.33:
The act or process of recasting.
(linguistics) An utterance translated into another grammatical form.
As verbs the difference between recast and restock
is that recast is to cast or throw again while restock is to stock again; to resupply with stocks.As a noun recast
is the act or process of recasting.recast
English
Verb
- the Roman gentlemen armed at all assayes, in the middest of their running-race, would cast and recast themselves from one to another horse.
- The whole bell had to be recast although it had only one tiny, hardly visible crack.
- Our conception of the world rises in us as our intellect recasts the impressions it receives from without into the forms of time, space, and causality.
Noun
(en noun)- Adults may use recasts to suggest corrections to mistakes in children's speech.