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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Recomposition

Recomposition \Re*com`po*si"tion\ (r?*k?m`p?z?sh?n), n. [Cf. F. recomposition.] The act of recomposing.

Wiktionary
recomposition

n. composition again or anew; the process or result of recompose.

Usage examples of "recomposition".

The first of these artifices is that from which results the possibility of decomposition or recomposition according to arbitrary laws.

Crisis runs through every moment of the development and recomposition of the totality.

For though the recomposition of music does not necessarily consist in the establishment of a new system, and can be fairly complete without it, it does consist in the impregnation of tone with new character and virtue.

In the most radical dismantling and recomposition of his world he has ever attempted, Nabokov constructs his Antiterra as if from scratch, compounding patterns of sound and word, color and contour, object and character, date and event, into networks whose very profusion mimics that of our own Terra and proves the greatest obstacle to disentangling their sense.

Just as Empire in the spectacle of its force continually determines systemic recompositions, so too new figures of resistance are composed through the sequences of the events of struggle.

If I could remain there without being devoured, I would be able to follow the shifts, the slow revolutions, the infinitesimal decompositions and recompositions in the chill of the currents.

As the case was opened, three more dead soldiers approached in varying stages of recomposition.

Puberty alters too much for reintroduction--a lot of it is mitigated by viral infections, RNA recompositions, stuff like that--but from infancy, we found we could grow a composite organism to adulthood.