-
potential repurposing applications. A
ladder repurposed as a coat rack in
Sardinia A
repurposed funnel lampshade in
Sardinia Railway line
repurposed as farm...
- patients: 35% of 'transformative'
drugs approved by the US FDA are
repurposed products.
Repurposing is
especially relevant for rare or
neglected diseases. A number...
- for 'spoils'; sg.: spolium) are
stones taken from an old
structure and
repurposed for new
construction or
decorative purposes. It is the
result of an ancient...
-
Repurposing refers to a
television industry practice in
which content providers negotiate deals that
allow a
series to earn
additional revenue during...
-
recovery Reusable packaging Reuse of
bottles Reuse of
human excreta Repurposing Reuse Right to
repair Symbol (Green Dot)
Upcycling Urban lumberjacking...
- to high-quality arms
produced by
cottage industries using salvaged and
repurposed materials.
Improvised firearms may be used as
tools by
criminals and insurgents...
- firearms, tanks,
missiles and
biological weapons.
Something that has been
repurposed, converted, or
enhanced to
become a
weapon of war is
termed weaponized...
-
repositioning (also
known as drug
repurposing, re-profiling, re-tasking, or
therapeutic switching) is the
repurposing of an
approved drug for the treatment...
- enhancements; many of the
weapons below are
currently still in use and have been
repurposed as
designated marksman rifles. For intermediate-powered
rifle cartridge...
- ASCII. It was
originally intended for
language tags, but has now been
repurposed as
emoji modifiers,
specifically for
region flags. U+E0001, U+E0020–U+E007F...