replan

replan

(riːˈplæn)
vb (tr) , -plans, -planning or -planned
to give a new plan to (a room, building, etc)to form a new plan, idea or scheme for
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

replan


Past participle: replanned
Gerund: replanning

Imperative
replan
replan
Present
I replan
you replan
he/she/it replans
we replan
you replan
they replan
Preterite
I replanned
you replanned
he/she/it replanned
we replanned
you replanned
they replanned
Present Continuous
I am replanning
you are replanning
he/she/it is replanning
we are replanning
you are replanning
they are replanning
Present Perfect
I have replanned
you have replanned
he/she/it has replanned
we have replanned
you have replanned
they have replanned
Past Continuous
I was replanning
you were replanning
he/she/it was replanning
we were replanning
you were replanning
they were replanning
Past Perfect
I had replanned
you had replanned
he/she/it had replanned
we had replanned
you had replanned
they had replanned
Future
I will replan
you will replan
he/she/it will replan
we will replan
you will replan
they will replan
Future Perfect
I will have replanned
you will have replanned
he/she/it will have replanned
we will have replanned
you will have replanned
they will have replanned
Future Continuous
I will be replanning
you will be replanning
he/she/it will be replanning
we will be replanning
you will be replanning
they will be replanning
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been replanning
you have been replanning
he/she/it has been replanning
we have been replanning
you have been replanning
they have been replanning
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been replanning
you will have been replanning
he/she/it will have been replanning
we will have been replanning
you will have been replanning
they will have been replanning
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been replanning
you had been replanning
he/she/it had been replanning
we had been replanning
you had been replanning
they had been replanning
Conditional
I would replan
you would replan
he/she/it would replan
we would replan
you would replan
they would replan
Past Conditional
I would have replanned
you would have replanned
he/she/it would have replanned
we would have replanned
you would have replanned
they would have replanned
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
References in periodicals archive ?
Designed by shopfitting specialist Replan and produced by the retail graphic display experts from Huddersfield-based Leach, the industry-first installation has transformed an ordinary stairwell into a stunning nature exhibit.
Changes are also likely on June 11 and June 13, with extra services laid on to let travellers replan their journeys.
So I think we should replan the circle,' Crisologo added.
"Therefore it's time for the Government to replan with industry and consumer groups to ensure people get the maximum benefit at the minimum cost."
'That could only be an indication that we really need to replan our agriculture.
Sometimes, when cities are destroyed, the opportunity is taken to replan them, ideally as an improvement--as happened with Lisbon after the earthquake, or, less convincingly, with Le Havre after it was bombed during the Second World War.
At least this might give the sufferers an indication of the disruption we're facing and allow us perhaps to replan our travel arrangements.
"Unfortunately, we have encountered some setbacks which mean that we've had to replan some of the work scheduled to take place this November.
The Overachiever's Guide to Getting Unstuck: Replan, Reprioritize, Reaffirm
(NYSE: NOC) said it has passed the last significant mission design milestone for NASA's James Webb Space Telescope, the spacecraft critical design review, five months ahead of schedule, following the replan.
By using a new framework that employs sequential decisionmaking, the previous single-decision research can be expanded into models that simulate numerous alternative treatment paths out into the future; maintain beliefs about patient health status over time even when measurements are unavailable or uncertain; and continually plan and replan as new information becomes available.