50 examples of reorganise in sentences

This was insufficient to keep the enemy on the move after a tactical success, and he would have ample time to reorganise.

He established his See, however, not at Chichester, but at Selsey where it remained until the Conqueror began to reorganise England upon a Roman plan, when more than one See was removed from the village in which it had long been established to the neighbouring great town.

St Richard not only reorganised the cathedral staff, but also established the "use" of Chichester, which he ordered to be followed throughout the diocese.

Under his impulse and guidance the French army, superior to them in numbers, organisation, and tactical skill, crushed one after another the more old-fashioned and smaller armies of the great continental Powers, with the result that the defeated armies, under the influence of national resentment after disaster, attempted to reorganise themselves upon the French model.

The Prussian Government adhered to these ideas, to which full effect was given in 1866, when the Prussian army, reorganised in 1860, crushed in ten days the army of Austria, and in 1870 when, in a month from the first shot fired, it defeated one half of the French army at Gravelotte and captured the other half at Sedan.

The Prussian statesmen of those days were not content merely to reorganise the army on the basis of universal service.

King William I. expanded and reorganised his army because he had passed through the bitter humiliation of seeing his country impotent and humbled by a combination of Austria and Russia.

Several months earlier Japanese suspicions had been aroused by the dispatch to Siberia of an alleged civilian railway engineering force to help Russia reorganise her railways, and the immense benefit that this force had admittedly conferred on the Far Eastern populations was acknowledged on all sides.

The British Expeditionary Force was ordered to Siberia in June, 1918, to assist the orderly elements of Russian society to reorganise themselves under a national Government and to resurrect and reconstruct the Russian front.

Such industries as she left us she would reorganise on the Kartel system.

There need be no doubt that she will completely socialise herself, completely reorganise her whole social and economic structure sooner than lose this war.

Even my short experience makes me think that we may have to reorganise this driving to suit our particular requirements.

We have reorganised the loads, taking on about 580 lbs.

Last night I decided to reorganise, and this morning told off Teddy Evans, Lashly, and Crean to return.

In the afternoon we had to reorganise.

I'd say, assuming that she must be thinking about me, and I'd open my official envelopes with an unusual interest, feeling practically sure that one of them must contain immediate orders for methe one and only meto proceed forthwith to England and reorganise the War Office, taking over a couple of six-cylinder cars and a furnished flat in St. James's for the purpose.

Bentham is a denyer; he denies with a loud and universally convincing voice; his fault is that he can affirm nothing, except that money is pleasant in the purse, and food in the stomach, and that by this simplest of all beliefs he can reorganise society.

He can shatter it in piecesno thanks to him, for its old fastenings are quite rottenbut he cannot reorganise it; this is work for quite others than he.

SOCIALISM, a social system which, in opposition to the competitive system that prevails at present, seeks to reorganise society on the basis, in the main, of a certain secularism in religion, of community of interest, and co-operation in labour for the common good, agreeably to the democratic spirit of the time and the changes required by the rise of individualism and the decay of feudalism.

My first care will be, with or without the help of Parliament, to reorganise the army.

With regard to the terms of peace, it was obvious that Schleswig-Holstein would now be Prussian; it could scarcely be doubted that there must be a reform in the Confederation, which would be reorganised under the hegemony of Prussia, and that Austria would be excluded from all participation in German affairs.

The House had refused the money to reorganise the army, and it was this reorganised army which had achieved so unexampled a triumph.

The House had refused the money to reorganise the army, and it was this reorganised army which had achieved so unexampled a triumph.

The German nation, which was much excited and thought little of the precise terms of treaties, wished to defend the right; Bismarck knew that in this matter the Prussian claim could not be supported; moreover, even if he had wished to go to war with France he was not ready; for some time must elapse before the army of the North German Confederation could be reorganised on the Prussian model.

He made preparations; the army was reorganised, the numbers increased, and a new weapon introduced.

50 examples of  reorganise  in sentences