When the law wasreenacted in 1903 the board was reappointed.
The Council of Trent reenacted the laws concerning the Index.
He himselfreenacted these very canons, thereby practically condemning his own election.
The repressive statutes were, however, temporary, and, although they were reenacted more than once, the meetings revived during the intervals of freedom.
If there is any doubt on the subject, the law should be reenacted with special reference to the District of Columbia.
The legislation of the colony began to assume form and system in the reign of Queen Anne; and in the year after her death, 1715, the Assembly passed sixty-six acts, most of which had been frequently reenacted before.
We all know the penal laws against Catholics in England, Ireland, and Scotland, reenacted with additional severity under William and Mary, almost in the eighteenth century.
If we wish to see how the same impostures are reenacted in our own times, we need only read the accounts of certain evening amusements at the Tuileries.
The ordinance for the government of the territory north of the Ohio River, passed in 1787 and reenacted by Congress after the adoption of the Constitution, proved to be an act of great significance in its relation to the limitation of slavery.
During four successive years it was reenacted in one form or another and was not repealed by direct vote until 1844.
Pointing toward the great hall they knew was somewhere above, she reenacted the scene there; she evidently knew what had transpired.
In the election of the Boy Bishop was reenacted with a great deal of adventitious detail one of these episodes.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "reenacted" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.