Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Reseated.
Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Reseated and, of course, Reseated synonyms and on the right images related to the word Reseated.
Reseat
Reseat Re*seat" (r?-s?t"), v. t.
1. To seat or set again, as on a chair, throne, etc.
--Dryden.
2. To put a new seat, or new seats, in; as, to reseat a
theater; to reseat a chair or trousers.
Meaning of Reseated from wikipedia
-
Committee of Safety,
which dissolved the
Third Protectorate Parliament, and
reseated the Rump
Parliament dismissed by his
father in
April 1653. This marked...
- they were told that the
floor was
becoming soft and p****engers had to be
reseated. As a result, the
aircraft was not
evacuated immediately on landing, exposing...
-
resulting in
aortic incompetence. The
valve must be
resuspended to be
reseated, as well as to
repair or
prevent coronary artery injury. Also, the area...
-
Soyuz TM-27. The crew
carried out two spacewalks, one
inside Spektr to
reseat some
power cables and
another outside to set up
experiments delivered by...
-
after she
graduated secondary school moved to Dar es
Salaam so that she can
Reseat her
secondary examination and that when she
started to sing and subsequently...
-
pressure inside the
vessel will stop rising. Once it
reaches the valve's
reseating pressure, the
valve will close. The
blowdown is
usually stated as a percentage...
-
administration saw the
Mellon appointment as a sign that
Harding would "
reseat the
power of
special privileged interests, the
powers of
avarice and greed...
- for
special events, 7,000 in a
general admission setting and 4,500 for
reseated seating. The site was
originally the
location of the
Girod Street Cemetery...
-
pressure has to drop
below the set
pressure in
order for the
piston to
reseat (see
blowdown in
relief valve article).
Modulating The
pilot is designed...
-
church stands on a
prominent site
overlooking the town. It was
restored and
reseated by
James Piers St
Aubyn in 1886–1891, with
further internal alterations...