Word family noun deed ≠ misdeed do doing adjective done overdone undone verb do outdo overdo redo undo
From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishredore‧do /riːˈduː/ verb (past tense redid /-ˈdɪd/, past participle redone /-ˈdʌn/, third person singular redoes /-ˈdʌz/) [transitive] 1 AGAINto do something again You’ll have to redo this piece of work.2 to change the way a room is decorated SYN redecorate We’re having the kitchen redone.→ See Verb tableExamples from the Corpus
redo• Marion would remember the times when what Amelia had done had to be redone by some one else.• She is redoing her A-levels in chemistry, physics and biology in the sixth form of a London girls' school.• Blair stood at the mirror, redoing her makeup.• I can't read a word of this - you'll have to redo it.• We're redoing the bathroom.• Much to his credit, the waiter balked at redoing the check.• The new owners had completely redone the place.• They don't have the money to redo the plumbing right now.• The pollsters redid the surveys and found them accurate.• The wallpaper came off and we had to redo the whole thing.• Theorists all over the world had been redoing their sums for nothing.• Dissatisfied with the drum parts he had played and recorded on his own, he invited Fleetwood to redo them all.