Encouraged by two critics, Henry Mackenzie and Lord Woodhouselee, he determined to recast this second issue and publish it under his own name.
Like most Spanish dramatists, Calderón wrote too much and too speedily, and he was too often content to recast the productions of his predecessors.
It was finally decided to have itrecast in a larger size.
It must be melted and recast to make individual ingots of smaller size.
To effect this it is necessary to recast the horse.
Eight years later, the author being then in Italy, it was recast with great care in mellifluous blank verse.
And even the parts assigned to the greater deities have been recast for the purposes of Virgil's epic.
The vague outlines of the story which he followed enabled Virgil to enlarge his conception with an ampler content of local and national material, than if he had been called upon to recast a more definite and more vital tradition.
The section treating of their solution seems, indeed, in certain parts to be later[1060] than the other main portions of the chapter on the Antinomies, and must have been at least recast after completion of the Postulates.
Had Kant made all the necessary alterations which these new positions involve, he would, as we shall find,[1038] have had entirely to recast the chapters on Schematism and on the Principles of Understanding.
To have recast the Antinomies as he had recast the Paralogisms would have involved alterations much too extensive.
But save for this one alteration the entire section is inspired by considerations foreign to the Critique; this section, like B 17, must be recast before it will harmonise with the subsequent argument.
As we shall find, Kant's teaching is ill-expressed in the sections on Amphiboly; so much so that they could not be recast without seriously disturbing the balance of his architectonic.
That is to say, it led him to develop that doctrine of transcendental idealism which reappears in the concluding sections of the Aesthetic, and which wasrecast and developed in the Analytic.
We might recast the whole map of Europe, we might dismember the German Empire, we might dismember the Austrian Empire, we might dismember the Turkish Empire, and yet entirely fail to achieve the objects for which we entered the war.
In poetry, music, and the several details of church worship Luther recast the old models, and gave them to his followers with contents purified and adapted to those needs which he himself had made them to realize.
Once more I will recast the same passage and give a new form to it as follows: “Alyattes’ son was Croesus, by birth a Lydian.
Footnote 57: Cicero’s conception of the requirements of rhythmical prose (as compared with those of verbal fidelity) is curiously illustrated by the way in which he is supposed to have recast the letter sent by Lentulus to Catiline.
The play as it stands is an amplification and a recast of an earlier play, The First Part of Fortunatus, which had been performed at Henslowe's Theatre about four years previously.
The suppressed first part of the Amateur Emigrant, written in San Francisco in 1879, which it was proposed now to condense and to some extent recast for the Edinburgh Edition.
I have the first six or seven chapters of St. Ives to recast entirely.
India, however, is the natural home of a mythology recast by speculation.
These lines were entirely recast and condensed, with additions of Chaucer's own, and answer to Kn.
The original Palamon and Arcite was too good to be wholly lost; but it was entirely recast in a new metre, and so became quite a new work.
It was led, to use a later phrase, by Whigs not Radicals; by men who fully accepted the British constitution, and proposed to remove abuses, not to recast the whole system.
It repudiates all tradition, and aspires to recast the whole social order.
The Life of Bowyer being recast and enlarged was republished under the title of Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century.
The author, as he states in the preface, had "found it necessary entirely to rewrite some chapters, and recast others, and to modify or omit some passages given in former editions.
But he is now mainly memorable as the author of Marianna, a tragedy from the life of Herod, which was recast in French by Tristan and by Voltaire, and still keeps a place on the stage.
In fact, all their miracles and legendary marvels run in parallel lines, because all were recast in the same creed-mold in Alexandria.
The whole scheme of defence had therefore to be recast so as to transform this reserve system into an outpost system and to create a new reserve system in rear.
The plan they had intended to adopt was to recast the scheme of defence and construct amidst the existing network of derelict trenches a new support and reserve line.
General Bannatine-Allason therefore at once decided that the whole scheme of defence must be recast and largely augmented.
A fourteenth-century bell recast by Taylor, with old lettering reproduced.
At Blewbury, in Berkshire, a local man attempted to recast a bell in 1825.
The Rondo in C had originally a different form and was recast by him for two pianos at Strzyzewo, where he passed the whole summer of 1828.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "recast" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.