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Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
re-align

also realign, 1876 in reference to railroad tracks; 1923, in reference to European international relations, from re- "back, again" + align. Related: Realigned; realigning.

Wikipedia
Re-Align

"Re-Align" is a single by the heavy metal band Godsmack. It reached number three on the Mainstream Rock chart and number twenty eight on the Modern Rock chart in the United States. The single was released in its album form, but was also used to promote upcoming-at-the-time acoustic EP The Other Side.

Usage examples of "re-align".

No one else moving, not towards them - yes, one more, just as they passed out from beneath the lacy, whitened trees - man in overalls, back of the van, probable - difficult, focus, focus - aim, steady, re-align, fire.

The task at hand was to re-align the modules in uniform longitudinal bundles to withstand acceleration.

There were too many troops crowding at the hill's base, and it would cause chaos if the battalions tried to re-align themselves in the darkness.

A few hundred yards away there was a planetarium, I saw a performance once--that was before they bad to re-align the projector.

In a vast, convulsive recession of the equinoxes, a billion sidereal days had reborn themselves, re-aligned the nebulae and island universes in their original perspectives.

There are other sources, and I will teach you to find and re-align them, and then the Gates will return.