释义 |
reˈhear, v.|riː-| [re- 5 a.] 1. trans. To hear again in a court of law or in a judicial manner.
1686,1702–3[see rehearing vbl. n.]. 1756W. Toldervy Hist. 2 Orphans IV. 102 The magistrate..reheard the affair. 1781S. Peters Hist. Connecticut 145 The first court suspends from the communion; the second re-hears the evidence, and confirms or sets aside the suspension. 1818Cruise Digest (ed. 2) II. 170 The cause was reheard; and Lord Hardwicke..changed his opinion. 1868J. H. Blunt Ref. Ch. Eng. I. 261 Delegates named by the Crown to re-hear the cause. 2. To hear (a sound) again.
1799F. Burney Jrnls. & Lett. (1973) IV. 297 He has taken the amazing trouble & toil of copying the whole, from the pleasure the interview gave him! though he may always re-hear it de vive voix! 1815Hobhouse Substance Lett. (1816) II. 47 M. Regnault went on, but, coming to ask ‘in whose name shall our negotiators speak?’ re-heard the same voices reply, ‘in the name of the nation’. 1947Observer 28 Dec. 2/5, I long to rehear such great contrapuntal machines as the Quoniam and Amen choruses. |