A second reason, of equal if not greater importance, is the fact that, owing to the expense of manufacture and material, the various portions of the knightly equipment were remade and altered to suit new fashions and requirements.
And he remade the bed while X lit a stogy and went back to the smoker.
Suffice it to say that the porter remembered who he was and what he was, and merelyremade the bed.
They were full of hope and patriotism, their aim and expectation seeming to be to have all wrongs righted, all abuses done away with, and Korea remade in a day a free government and people.
This crown has been recently remade for King Edward VII.
Whilst the gems which are set in it are national property, the crown is usually remade for each successive sovereign.
Likewise, whatever he may have known of the Fathers and of all the dogmatic possession and ecclesiastical tradition of the Church, this also was remade in Francis.
The matter of his argument has become his own; it has been remade in his thinking, and is presented as from himself--and God.
He had lazily suggested that they open the town house while carpenters and painters remade the cabin, but she had protested hotly, "Oh, do let's keep it just as it always was!
He had special breakfasts, he had his paper, his hair was brushed and his bed remade a dozen times a day.
In the teeth of Turkish opposition the West Kents remade the dug-out that day.
I slung the mattress away and, seizing some clothes from a wardrobe outside, with the orderly hanging on to me the while, remade the bed.
But they'll change the core of you almost as rapidly as they have remade the surface of you into a society beauty.
Napoleon remade the heavily imposing façade, so familiar to all who cross the river by the Pont de la Concorde, but its grimness is its charm rather than its grace.
It was made and remade by five generations of the cleverest workers who ever lived, until it took supreme rank as the greatest storehouse of luxurious trifles in all the world.
The unprepossessing wardrobe she had gathered in the passing years was remade again and again by the village dressmaker.
Roger took the gun into the living tent and Ernest remade the pack.
I'm convinced that when you actually undertake to put such a plant in operation, you'll realize that there are details to be remade that you never dreamed of, on paper.
The communicating trench in the foreground was levelled everyday by heavy shells and remadeat night.
Under Louis-Philippe the fortifications were entirelyremade and in 1866 preparations were in hand to reconstruct them on a new plan in accordance with the requirements of the then existing military armament.
This remade structure of human nature, this objective mind, as Hegel called it, is fixed and transmitted in the folkways and mores, social ritual, i.
But the world which man has thus remade has in turn reacted back upon man and in doing so has made him human.
The sturdy woman pulled off her gloves, her cape and bonnet, and remade the artist's little camp bed as briskly as any housemaid.
When the Baroness gave her a pretty new bonnet, or a gown in the fashion of the day, Betty remade it completely at home, and spoilt it by producing a dress of the style of the Empire or of her old Lorraine costume.
They remade it at the cost of their lives in Flanders, in the face of incredulous enemies and criticizing neutrals, painstakingly, without science, doggedly out of their own wills.
They remade their external world, out of this new warfare.
Aicard had genius, he would not have translated Othello; he would have remade it, just as the youthful Racine remade the tragedies of Euripides'.
When the cathedral of Rouen remade three bays of the nave's triforium, the model taken was the geometric design of that masterpiece of Rayonnant Gothic, the abbatial of St. Ouen.
That church of three aisles was remade with cupolas and blessed in 1180, and of the same date are the fortified narthex and its tower.
Croix, rebuilt by Charlemagne when Saracens destroyed it, and again remade (1099) as Romanesque according to the school of Poitou.
Under a hillock is a small shrine remade in the XIII century.
The first wife remade her life, which was not astonishing; but he remade his, which seemed unbelievable.
What is more, every singularity, every attitude, mood or tense which the intellect grasps for consideration is immediately remade so as to fit its own moods and tenses.
As Duke Ernest remade Gotha, after the ravages of the Thirty Years' War, by means of education (p.
Combined these have remade medical science, and have opened up immense possibilities for benefiting mankind.
In Denmark, agricultural education has remade the nation (R.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "remade" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.