From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishreassemblere‧as‧sem‧ble /ˌriːəˈsembəl/ verb 1 [transitive] to bring together the different parts of something to make a whole again, after they have been separated The equipment had to be dismantled and reassembled at each new location.2 [intransitive] if a group of people reassemble, they meet together again after a period apart Parliament reassembled after a seven-week break.→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
reassemble• A morning fire below the smoky mirror, a mixture of lights, tonic in a glass can reassemble her to me.• At age eight, Ryan tore apart a broken television set and tried to reassemble it.• But he was able to reassemble much of his old team to complete the final volumes of his work.• The problem is sometimes that parts go astray, which makes it impossible to reassemble the file.• To reassemble the joint, use a non-setting mastic rather than putty and apply it liberally to the socket.• These programs allowed thousands of Catholics to continue practicing their faith as they attempted to reassemble the pieces of their lives.• She says the museum in good faith tried to devise plans to reassemble the stones.• Note which way it was fitted, insert the new one the same way round, then reassemble the valve.