Find the word definition

Crossword clues for reinspect

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Reinspect

Reinspect \Re`in*spect"\ (-sp?kt"), v. t. To inspect again.

Wiktionary
reinspect

vb. inspect again

Usage examples of "reinspect".

Without authority over contamination, inspectors could no longer reinspect feces-covered chickens at the end of the line.

As with poultry, to create an illusion of federal oversight, inspectors were authorized to reinspect six sides of beef-the equivalent of three cows-out of as many as 3,200 cattle per shift.

He was just starting to reinspect the men listening to the girl when suddenly it came to him that the stink of wrongness was rolling from the six.

Still, I had almost been arrested because I had decided to delay my departure by fifteen minutes and carefully reinspect my preparations.

When such defects were found on a bird, the inspector pointed them out to a plant worker, oversaw their removal, and then reinspected the finished product to make sure it complied with stringent inspection standards.

Those two men wore heavy fur coats and an air of ill-concealed apprehension, and they nervously eyed the two aircraft and anxiously inspected and reinspected the cargo they were taking along: satchels of clothing and personal belongings, satchels of official papers, a bale of political tracts, baskets of sandwiches and wine, a crate of six pigeons.

He reinspected the trail periodically, but it retained a coarse, stony texture.

He was reinspecting his trousers, spreading tented folds of material between his fingers, when he realized he was not alone in his attentions.

A few minutes later, after reinspecting the mailer, I found my answer.

I would appreciate you and your staff reinspecting every failed compartment the air wing owns.

But as I said, the cartons are sealed under the eye of government inspectors, and each carton is reinspected upon the breaking of such seals at the eradication center to make sure there has been no tampering.

Those two men wore heavy fur coats and an air of ill-concealed apprehension, and they nervously eyed the two aircraft and anxiously inspected and reinspected the cargo they were taking along: satchels of clothing and personal belongings, satchels of official papers, a bale of political tracts, baskets of sandwiches and wine, a crate of six pigeons.

Then they were reinspected by crews who'd heard that other crews had checked them out.