Verb
To fashion anew; to form or mold into shape a second time.
Source: Webster's dictionaryTo some extent we are all the prisoners of stereotypes; we see each other in terms of distorted and oversimplified images. Better communication in the realm of ideas, of the arts, and of science can help refashion these false images. And by seeing more clearly we may act more wisely. Chester Bowles
I am prone to reshape and refashion things to try and please as many people as I can, to get as many nods or smiles out of as many people as possible. Steven Curtis Chapman
Eager souls, mystics and revolutionaries, may propose to refashion the world in accordance with their dreams but evil remains, and so long as it lurks in the secret places of the heart, utopia is only the shadow of a dream. Nathaniel Hawthorne
She is remaking her image Source: Internet
Such probes tend to refashion our into the frame of knowledge of colonialism. Source: Internet
Over the next year or two, the UK may have a better chance than ever before to refashion relationship with the EU. Source: Internet