verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a radical rethink (= when you think about a plan or idea again in a very different way )
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The Conservative Party leader called for a radical rethink of economic policy.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
force
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Using modern forensic science techniques on original evidence, the West Midlands force have been forced to rethink their view of events.
need
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Its premise, that a robust global economy is a prerequisite for healthy local societies, needs to be rethought .
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These are the places where any community needs to begin in rethinking schools.
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We may need to rethink and redefine what is provided, by whom and how.
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I believe we need to radically rethink the whole way we consume energy.
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We will need to rethink the role of science in public affairs.
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However, the lift industry cliché that a lift is a lift needs to be rethought for hotels.
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Thirdly, I will conclude that the way we approach and use research perhaps needs to be rethought .
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
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Perhaps it's time to rethink our priorities.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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A series of developments over the last several years has resulted in some rethinking.
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But by rethinking our approach to haircare, we can keep looking younger for longer.
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But I believe that children need to be inducted into the tradition of reliving and rethinking moments of their lives.
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Depending upon the degree of estrangement, many parents of work-inhibited students may benefit from rethinking existing patterns of communication.
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He finished his prayers, rapidly rethought his assumptions, and woke up Jesuit colleagues in several different time zones.
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Its premise, that a robust global economy is a prerequisite for healthy local societies, needs to be rethought.
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The need to rethink our concept of the research library in this wider information environment will be discussed.
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This made it possible to rethink multiculturalism's psychological interpretation of racism as individual prejudice in more structural and politicized terms.