The story of the rediscovery of Madeira by the Englishman Robert Machim or Machin, eloping from Bristol with his lady-love, Anne d'Arfet, in the reign of Edward III.
The revivals of religions have been the rediscovery of the glad truth, freed each time from some accompanying error.
He dropped his hand, said: “I am Lewis Orne of Rediscovery and Reeducation.
But I thought I was through with old Rediscovery & Reeducation when you drafted me off of Hamal into the I-A .
There followed the epoch of the great mediaeval systems, the rediscovery of Aristotle and the attempt to fuse the Christian faith with the Aristotelian system.
It is to the clinical genius of Trousseau that we owe the rediscovery of tic, the careful observation of its objective manifestations, and the recognition of accompanying mental peculiarities.
Partly for this reason and partly because none of Captain Nesbit's crew wished to return to the island, there came to be in time a feeling of distrust about all this rediscovery of Hy-Brasail or O-Brazile.
While such ideas were gradually forming in our minds, came the rediscovery of Mendel's work.
Where new conceptions emerge, the imperfection of the instruments, mechanical and methodological, of the sciences renders them unfruitful, until their rediscovery in a later age.
Its germinal thought may not have been new, but, if not new, it had at least needed rediscovery from the beginning.
Junipero's memorial, forwarded to Madrid, reawakened the sentiments hisrediscovery of Monterey had stirred.
The fame he had achieved by the rediscovery of Monterey was not of his choosing.
Few events in Spanish history since the expulsion of the Moors three centuries before had occasioned the joy that greeted the news of the rediscovery of Monterey.
Here, again, Monterey was playing an all-important part in history, for it was the fame Junipero had won through its rediscovery that sped his message to the Viceroy and through him to the King.
In one way or another the rediscovery of Plato proved the most valuable part of the Renaissance's gift from Greece.
First and most immediate in its influence on art and literature and thought, was the rediscovery of the ancient literatures.
What was the importance of the rediscovery of Hebrew?
It did for canon (church) law what the rediscovery of the Justinian Code had done for civil law; that is, it organized canon law as a new and important teaching subject.
There can be rediscovery of those aspects of life which are so easily taken for granted; one can relearn to see the world other than through the tunnel vision of self-preoccupation.
I shared a kinship with autumn following therediscovery of cancer.
Many came from the Far East in consequence of the rediscovery of the sea route to India, by Alexander's admiral, Nearchus.
His exegetical lectures seemed like a rediscovery of the Holy Scriptures.
The change of view which separated the Reformers from mediaeval theologians almost amounted to a rediscovery of Scripture; and it was effected by their conception of faith.
The joy and inspiration of the Protestant Reformers was the rediscovery and popular interpretation of the Bible.
It cannot be remarked, however, that it brought about any change in the fading knowledge of these valuable regions, and we hear no more of them until their rediscovery at the close of the fifteenth century.
After the rediscovery of Greenland we even get sometimes two delineations of this country on the same map, one to the north of Norway and the other in its right place in the west.
This communication increased about the beginning of the sixteenth century, and this had a decisive influence on the so-called rediscovery of the White Sea by the English.
But in any case no long time can have elapsed between the alleged final overthrow of the Eastern Settlement, perhaps about 1500, and the rediscovery of Greenland in the sixteenth century.
Wyatt's primary deed was his gradual rediscoveryof the iambic decasyllabic line duly accented--the line that had been first discovered by Chaucer for England; and next came its building into sonnet and stanza.
We may mark four stages in the rediscovery of Greek sculpture.
The rediscovery of the Aristotelian biology is a modern thing.
The first published utterance of Wells was, I think, a paper in The Fortnightly Review for July, 1891, called The Rediscovery of the Unique.
For two hundred years thereafter extreme isolation kept them outside the pale of history till their rediscovery by Prince Henry, the Navigator.
Alexander the Great's rediscovery of the old sea route to the Orient sounds like a modern event in relation to the gray ages behind it.
It is a remarkable spectacle, this rediscovery of nature in an age supposed to be given over to materialism, and its influence appears in every branch of our literature.
This is to be referred not only to his pleasure-loving nature, but to the great influence upon him of the rediscovery of Greek art in his day, an art which dealt distinctively with objects of delight.
Raphael painted at a time when scholars and artists were enthusiastic over the rediscovery of the literature and art of the ancient world.
The poet wrote it in his youth, and although it was known that such a volume had been printed and that it had been suppressed by its author immediately before publication, it was considered a lost work until its rediscovery in 1897.
The account which Gairdner gives in the Introduction to his last edition of the Paston letters, of the loss and rediscovery of those historic documents, is also a striking example of the manner in which books may lie hidden for years.
Such in brief was the outlook in the central problem of biology at the time of the rediscovery of Mendel's work.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "rediscovery" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.