Verb
To adjust or settle again; to put in a different order or relation; to rearrange.
Source: Webster's dictionaryIt is always the psychic and social grounds, brought into play by each medium or technology, that readjust the balance of the hemispheres and of human sensibilities into equilibrium with those grounds. Marshall McLuhan
Each time you learn something new you must readjust the whole framework of your knowledge. Eleanor Roosevelt
If you can develop this ability to see what you look at, to understand its meaning, to readjust your knowledge to this new information, you can continue to learn and to grow as long as you live and you'll have a wonderful time doing it. Eleanor Roosevelt
One has occasionally to pocket one's pride and readjust one's ideas. Agatha Christie
What do you want to have true? Pick something between total fantasy & 51% believable, get going, & readjust as you learn. David Allen (author)
But if socialism is a social necessity, then it would be human nature and not socialism which would have to readjust itself, if ever the two clashed. Karl Kautsky