restitch

restitch

(ˌriːˈstɪtʃ)
vb (tr)
to stitch again
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
She was forced to flee to Belgium for corrective surgery in December 2018, where she wasmade to stay awakewhile her surgeon sliced down the side of her face to pull back the excess skin and restitch it behind her ears.
"You can either cut the scar out and restitch it, or you provide laser treatment for scar fading."
Asking for hepped-up programing in a constituency office to restitch the connection between politics and people might seem like a tall order.
Taking inspiration from a new trend called upcycling, volunteers will cut, glue, restitch and reshape clothes, furniture and other goods into wearable and bespoke pieces which will then be sold to customers in a dedicated area of the shop to channel more money into the charity.
(77) In "To Fight the Losing War, to Remember the Lost War," Junko Oba demonstrates how this worked in the whole unfolding of gunka (Japanese military song) as a genre, demonstrating how the popularization of the genre led to its uses as a forum for questioning the motivations of war (35) and for detaching notions of friendship from loyalty to the emperor and attempting to restitch them to a less militant sort of nation (39).
Hilda Fogarty said she was offering to help two men who came into her shop, Restitch, in Kingsway Avenue, Teesville, Middlesbrough, when they stole the handbag.
A doctor came into restitch my wounds - it was a bit like F k t i !N I' f li d i Frankenstein!
In this case, we revise the part in terms of the whole and/or the whole in terms of the part in order to restitch an integrated understanding.
And since you don't separate the cloth cover from the plastic TPL, there's no need to restitch the cover back to the TPL.
(5) Though officials remained skeptical of the venture's success, the training of midwives--dayas in Sudan Arabic--was dual purposed, for it is they who perform pharaonic circumcisions, then cut through the resulting scar tissue to enable delivery and restitch a woman's genital wound after birth.