How to Use reorganize in a Sentence
reorganize
verb- The club had to reorganize when most of its members moved away.
- The staff is still reorganizing the files according to the new system.
- The company was reorganized after it went bankrupt.
- The company is reorganizing as a corporation.
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He’s reorganized the company by putting the power back in the hands of the creative heads.
— Ryan Faughnder, Los Angeles Times, 27 Dec. 2023 -
None of those guys would prompt the Jazz to reorganize their starting lineup.
— The Salt Lake Tribune, 15 Dec. 2021 -
The remaining brain reorganizes itself and takes over the roles of the missing sections.
— Roberta McLain, Scientific American, 12 Dec. 2023 -
It is not yet known whether the company plans to sell or reorganize in some other way.
— Dallas News, 1 July 2022 -
At the end of 2021, the Athenaeum reorganized and rebranded as a new nonprofit.
— Hannah Edgar, Chicago Tribune, 22 Feb. 2023 -
The company lost 80% of its business in the first months of the pandemic, and Chesky reorganized it in a scramble for survival.
— Sasha Rogelberg, Fortune, 24 Jan. 2024 -
Half of Americans had to reorganize their entire work lives, and there was no plan.
— Sarah Raza, BostonGlobe.com, 14 July 2023 -
For parents of students asked to stay home, the days since the announcement have been a scramble to find last-minute babysitters and reorganize lives.
— Megan Specia, New York Times, 13 Sep. 2023 -
To rewrite the script, build and reorganize your own leadership team.
— Expert Panel®, Forbes, 25 Jan. 2022 -
Now, on the phone with McKee, these things took on new meaning, the past reorganizing itself in her mind.
— Alex Morris, Rolling Stone, 9 Sep. 2023 -
But plans were put on hold and then scaled back after sales faltered later in 2016 and the brand reorganized and restructured.
— Lorraine Mirabella, Baltimore Sun, 13 June 2024 -
The speed in which the US withdrawal didn't even give them a chance to see what was happening and to internalize this and reorganize.
— CBS News, 24 Aug. 2022 -
Spring is the perfect time to reorganize and declutter your home.
— Kaylei Fear, Better Homes & Gardens, 2 Aug. 2023 -
But this was before the studio chiefs reorganized the structure of filmmaking and before guilds were formed in the 1930s.
— Tim Gray, Variety, 3 Mar. 2023 -
Can these powerful drugs give the brain a chance to reorganize and rewire itself?
— Cheri Lucas Rowlands, Longreads, 9 Apr. 2024 -
Prosecutors also showed an email from 2017, after Mills tried to reorganize the staffing in the jail.
— Cory Shaffer, cleveland, 3 Sep. 2021 -
Just think of those couples trying to reorganize and design their home.
— Popular Science, 28 Feb. 2021 -
The plan now is to reorganize her debt, cut her losses on the cryotherapy center and focus on her salons.
— Robert Channick, chicagotribune.com, 10 Sep. 2020 -
Steward filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on May 6 and is in the process of reorganizing its debt.
— Michelle Marchante, Miami Herald, 15 May 2024 -
James used PullString to reorganize the MP3 recordings of his father.
— Popular Science, 8 Jan. 2021 -
As for what this response looks like, the key is to reorganize talent strategies to put people (not product or profit) at the center.
— Lisa Caldwell, Forbes, 3 Jan. 2023 -
Fine said that the bill gives Disney more than a year to reorganize the district and to rethink its criticism of Florida laws.
— James Call, USA TODAY, 20 Apr. 2022 -
This could also be a call to reorganize your home and redraw your boundaries -- set the scene for harmony and healing to flow back into your life.
— Tarot Astrologers, chicagotribune.com, 20 Feb. 2021 -
Designate one day to reorganize these areas in your home that attract the most clutter.
— Kaylei Fear, Better Homes & Gardens, 17 Feb. 2022 -
Homes were quickly reorganized and retrofitted for workspace and privacy, desks and ring lights were purchased, and everyone learned how to increase their bandwidth and navigate Zoom.
— Jason Wingard, Forbes, 27 Sep. 2024 -
The county reorganized court schedules, adding a new call for detention hearings and removing a former misdemeanor call.
— Madeline Buckley, Chicago Tribune, 15 Sep. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'reorganize.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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