Verb
repackage (third-person singular simple present repackages, present participle repackaging, simple past and past participle repackaged)
(transitive) To package again or differently.
But if I repackage it and call it humanely raised, GMO and antibiotic free, I can sell it for $2.40 per pound, thus raising my profit to 41 cents per pound. Source: Internet
Another method would have cyber criminals enlist ‘stuffers’ to purchase goods from online vendors using stolen data, then send them to several ‘drop’ sites, repackage them and resell them. Source: Internet
After the monster success of the 1976 live album, the singer's big hair and good looks led his record company to repackage him as a pop star. Source: Internet
He has made himself the stooge, the mark, for every crazy blogger, political quack, racial theorist, foreign leader or nutcase peddling a story that he might repackage to his benefit as a tweet, an appointment, an executive order or a policy. Source: Internet
Local sellers of pesticides and herbicides, for instance, import generic chemicals, repackage them and sell them at prices that are lower than those charged by multinational firms for their internationally known brands. Source: Internet
If you regularly provide tips, advice, case studies or the like in a free newsletter or ezine or on your blog, you may be able to repackage these articles into a free-standing product that readers would happily pay for. Source: Internet