remanufacture

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of remanufacture By rethinking the lifecycle of their products, companies can generate entirely new revenue streams through product returns, refurbishing, remanufacturing or even leasing models. Angeley Mullins, Forbes, 28 Oct. 2024 The following slide shows how remanufacturing and refurbishing to achieve an average 8.5 year total use (significantly longer SSD life) could reduce NAND supply chain greenhouse gas emissions by 40%. Thomas Coughlin, Forbes, 26 Sep. 2024 Russia is thought to simply remanufacture each nuclear weapon about every ten years. Jeffrey Lewis, Foreign Affairs, 30 July 2024 This discarded aluminum, steel, plastic, paper and cardboard should instead be turned into feedstock for remanufacturing new products and packaging, saving natural resources and millions of dollars in the process. Kevin Bommer, The Denver Post, 19 Apr. 2024 Western Electric invented the 300B in 1938, and the company, resurrected in 1996, soon began to remanufacture the legendary tube. Robert Ross, Robb Report, 20 Mar. 2024 At full capacity, the center can guide roughly 9,000 battery packs through their full life cycle, from repair and remanufacturing to ultimate recycling. IEEE Spectrum, 8 Feb. 2024 Reused, remanufactured, and refilled cartridges that reuse the HP chip or electronic circuitry are unaffected by Dynamic Security. Scharon Harding, Ars Technica, 9 Mar. 2023 This means looking beyond the product in the design process, reinventing supply chains and business models, and prioritizing product and parts recovery, reuse, and remanufacturing over recycling. Matthew Cockerill, Fortune, 12 Sep. 2023
Recent Examples of Synonyms for remanufacture
Verb
  • But if the Rangers don’t bring their best effort in Columbus on Saturday, general manager Chris Drury’s desire to remake this roster could become a lot stronger and sharper with two weeks off and a month to go until the trade deadline.
    Arthur Staple, The Athletic, 8 Feb. 2025
  • Experiencing the narrative through a floating, first-person lens proves a cinematic magic trick that both breaks and then remakes the rules of the art form – ultimately, illuminating the poetic power of movies as engines of empathy.
    Pete Hammond, Deadline, 7 Feb. 2025
Verb
  • But the idea of an imperial America taking over a piece of Palestinian homeland – with American boots on the ground if necessary – and refashioning it into a glitzy Mediterranean playground is eye-popping.
    Howard LaFranchi, The Christian Science Monitor, 5 Feb. 2025
  • And Davos itself is a microcosm of this microcosm: a landscape of Burkean sublimity whose rarefied air brought tuberculosis patients to its slopes for decades before the development of streptomycin began to empty out the sanatoriums, which over time refashioned themselves as hotels.
    Caitlín Doherty, Harper's Magazine, 2 Jan. 2025
Verb
  • The move comes after the Chicago rapper ran an ad for his company website, only to delete all standard offerings and leave only a t-shirt with a swastika design online for $20.
    DeMicia Inman, VIBE.com, 11 Feb. 2025
  • Trump’s flood-the-zone approach to his first three weeks (it’s only been three weeks) is part of political strategy designed to overwhelm and distract.
    Allison Morrow, CNN, 11 Feb. 2025
Verb
  • The development — dubbed Heritage Place — is the realization of a compromise that community members, stakeholders and the city devised a few years ago to keep Kroehler mansion from demolition.
    Tess Kenny, Chicago Tribune, 1 Feb. 2025
  • But one way of doing this is an SRO, meaning the SEC and the CFTC would jointly create an SRO that would devise these standards, and that would pull in industry expertise.
    Steven Ehrlich, Forbes, 31 Jan. 2025
Verb
  • In the film, Elizabeth Sparkle (Moore) uses The Substance to create a younger counterpart, Sue (Qualley).
    Fred Topel, Deadline, 8 Feb. 2025
  • Trocchi said the opioid settlement committee was created to ensure that experts, including treatment providers and individuals in recovery, could come up with a plan to meet the state’s needs.
    Laura Tillman, Hartford Courant, 8 Feb. 2025
Verb
  • During Dickerson’s trial, the prosecutor had played a tape of his graphic confession, and John had visualized strangling him.
    Lawrence Wright, The New Yorker, 10 Feb. 2025
  • This defiant and entertaining work playfully uses headshots and avatars to visualize clandestine audio recordings documenting years of Kafkaesque impositions, threats, and vital dissident art.
    Samantha Bergeson, IndieWire, 10 Feb. 2025
Verb
  • Between the lines: The emoluments clause of the Constitution, written in 1787, hardly envisaged a world where a president could conjure billions of dollars of wealth out of nowhere just by endorsing a meme.
    Felix Salmon, Axios, 19 Jan. 2025
  • This is a simple proximity data exchange between iPhones, but just for contact cards—envisaged aa s modern–day, touch-free business card update.
    Zak Doffman, Forbes, 18 Dec. 2024
Verb
  • At the federal level, the 1951 Boggs Act created the nation’s first mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses, and the 1956 Narcotic Control Act instituted the death penalty for anyone caught selling heroin to minors.
    TIME, TIME, 10 Feb. 2025
  • Lawson and Sundberg’s proposal is the council’s latest escalation in its efforts to disband encampments after members instituted a formal camping ban in 2022.
    Max Levy, The Denver Post, 8 Feb. 2025

Thesaurus Entries Near remanufacture

Cite this Entry

“Remanufacture.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/remanufacture. Accessed 16 Feb. 2025.

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