释义 |
reˈdate, v. [re- 5 a.] trans. To change the date of; to assign a new date to. Hence reˈdating vbl. n.
1611Cotgrave Dict., Redater, to redate, or adde a new date vnto. 1864Spectator 31 Dec. 1498 Instead of rewriting or redating the previous part of my letter I prefer to send it as it was written. 1935Huxley & Haddon We Europeans ii. 54 A recently propounded re-dating of a fragment of a skull. 1980Early Music Jan. 103/2 The new madrigal was not really published in appreciable quantity until the late 1530s, and the re-dating of a central group of manuscript sources shows that dissemination in manuscript was the main way in which the repertory circulated during the years 1520–40. |