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Repeat   /rɪpˈit/  /ripˈit/   Listen
Repeat

verb
(past & past part. repeated; pres. part. repeating)
1.
To say, state, or perform again.  Synonyms: ingeminate, iterate, reiterate, restate, retell.
2.
Make or do or perform again.  Synonyms: double, duplicate, reduplicate, replicate.
3.
Happen or occur again.  Synonym: recur.
4.
To say again or imitate.  Synonym: echo.
5.
Do over.  Synonym: take over.
6.
Repeat an earlier theme of a composition.  Synonyms: recapitulate, reprise, reprize.
noun
1.
An event that repeats.  Synonym: repetition.



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"Repeat" Quotes from Famous Books



... of course! Sligo, eh? Well, well! I never heard of a square-rigger discharging there—must see about th' charts. Ask them to repeat, ...
— The Brassbounder - A Tale of the Sea • David W. Bone

... urged, set off, on the spur of the moment, toward the gates, before the rest of the party well knew what was being done. It was too late for Mr. Carlyle to stop her and repeat that the servant should go, for Barbara was already up with Mr. Tom Herbert. The latter had seen her running toward him, and ...
— East Lynne • Mrs. Henry Wood

... in discussing the word 'chance,' I may at moments have seemed to be arguing for its real existence, I have not meant to do so yet. We have not yet ascertained whether this be a world of chance or no; at most, we have agreed that it seems so. And I now repeat what I said at the outset, that, from any strict theoretical point of view, the question is insoluble. To deepen our theoretic sense of the difference between a world with chances in it and a deterministic world is the most I can hope to do; and this I may now at last ...
— The Will to Believe - and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy • William James

... wished to ask. He had, therefore, devoted himself since his advent amongst the Indians to learning their language, and every day he acquired new words and phrases. Manikawan would pronounce the names of objects for him and have him repeat them after her until he could speak them correctly, laughing ...
— Ungava Bob - A Winter's Tale • Dillon Wallace

... hag of the south-west wind is similarly a bloodthirsty and fearsome demon. She is most virulent in the springtime. At Cromarty she is quaintly called "Gentle Annie" by the fisher folks, who repeat the saying: "When Gentle Annie is skyawlan (yelling) roond the heel of Ness (a promontory) wi' a white feather on her hat (the foam of big billows) they (the spirits) will be harrying (robbing) the crook"—that is, the pot which hangs from the crook is empty during the spring storms, which prevent ...
— Myths of Babylonia and Assyria • Donald A. Mackenzie


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