From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishrevisitre‧vis‧it /ˌriːˈvɪsɪt/ verb [transitive] 1 RETURN written to return to a place you once knew well Ten years later, I revisited the school to find out what had changed.2 formalAGAIN to consider or discuss something again We need to revisit this proposal as soon as the budget is clearer.→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
revisit• Maria was eager to revisit her first school.• By revisiting his own previous work, Delano has achieved something that very few photographers have even attempted before.• They revisited many of the places they had gone to on their honeymoon.• I begin by revisiting the arguments in the opening speeches about why we need the Bill.• Constantly revisit the disciplines and impact of your specific strategies.• Mayer has encouraged the actors to revisit the familiar text.• This means revisiting the mortgage market every few years to find a new loan.• And no matter how many times you revisit the place, it never gets better.• As it crawls round and round in circles it keeps revisiting the same pebbles.• Levey said he plans to revisit the same sites this spring and summer.• Having made the find and recorded that spot, he did not revisit the tree for nearly fifteen years.• Mary Stout, a combat nurse, revisited Vietnam two years ago.