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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Rearrangement

Rearrangement \Re`ar*range"ment\ (-ment), n. The act of rearranging, or the state of being rearranged.

Wiktionary
rearrangement

n. 1 The process of rearranging. 2 (context chemistry English) A rearrangement reaction.

WordNet
rearrangement

n. changing an arrangement

Wikipedia
Rearrangement

Rearrangement may refer to:

  • Rearrangement reaction
  • Rearrangement inequality

In genetics,

  • Chromosomal rearrangements, such as:
    • Translocations
    • Ring chromosomes
    • Chromosomal inversions

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Usage examples of "rearrangement".

If space-time can undergo massive rearrangement of its structure, which I believe it can, tearing and reconnecting according to a pre-determined disposition, then T-duality would allow for the compactification of extra space dimensions.

There, amid a fabulous fetishistic compendium of Belle Epoque embroidered underclothes, he at last smelled the rearrangement going on in me.

As when one has sampled several figures in a chapel and found them commonplace, one is apt to overlook a good one which may have got in by accident of shifting in some one of the several rearrangements made in the course of more than three centuries, so when sampling the chapels themselves, after finding half a dozen running which are of inferior merit, we approach the others with a bias against them.

Frenchman, in case during the rearrangement of the squadron someone got in the way.

Although the details are a little complicated, this number, roughly speaking, counts the possible rearrangements of the ingredients in a given physical system that leave its overall appearance intact.

Mutations are caused by radioactivity in the environment, by cosmic rays from space, or, as often happens, randomly-by spontaneous rearrangements of the nucleotides which statistically must occur every now and then.

The perspectives chosen for this narrative made necessary some rearrangements of detail, together with certain simplifications or modifications intended to eliminate repetitions, lagging, or confusion which only didactic explanation would have dispelled.

Suffice it to say that the rearrangement of the interior of the sack would have provided more than ample evidence for Shelyid to have from its study, had he the wits, derived brilliant treatises on heretofore unknown aspects of Brownian motion and entropy.

Everywhere, all over the world, the historian of the early twentieth century finds the same thing, the flow and rearrangement of human affairs inextricably entangled by the old areas, the old prejudices and a sort of heated irascible stupidity, and everywhere congested nations in inconvenient areas, slopping population and produce into each other, annoying each other with tariffs, and every possible commercial vexation, and threatening each other with navies and armies that grew every year more portentous.

It made Junior into a catalytoxic agent on account of the way the rearrangement of the desoxyribonucleic acid his genes was made of worked on the kappa waves of his nasty little brain, stepping them up as much as thirty microvolts.

Coldly thoughtful, Sabel made more disconnections, and rearrangements.

Coldly thought­ful, Sabel made more disconnections, and rearrangements.

Within the mutations of consciousness there takes place a process of rearrangement beyond the reach of mere space-time-bound events, an [emergent] process, which manifests itself discontinuously, or by leaps and bounds.

Their structure is composed of flexible, inert, non-organic duodecahedral fragments capable of directed rearrangement (morphallaxis).

Four and a half hours later they had hammered out a plan to contain the Horror It would require a huge increase in paramedical personnel It would require a massive rearrangement of the facilities at each of the international airports It would require the cooperation of the media.