Definition of Rearrangements

1. Noun. (plural of rearrangement) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Rearrangements

1. rearrangement [n] - See also: rearrangement

Lexicographical Neighbors of Rearrangements

rearomatizing
rearose
rearousal
rearousals
rearouse
rearoused
rearouses
rearousing
rearrange
rearrange the deck chairs on the Titanic
rearrangeable
rearranged
rearrangement
rearrangement reaction
rearrangement reactions
rearrangements (current term)
rearranger
rearrangers
rearranges
rearranging
rearrest
rearrested
rearresting
rearrests
rears
rears up
rearticulate
rearticulated
rearticulates
rearticulating

Literary usage of Rearrangements

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Theories of Organic Chemistry by Ferdinand August Karl Henrich (1922)
"CHAPTER XIX MOLECULAR rearrangements MOLECULAR rearrangements have been ... rearrangements must be considered now where variations in the molecular ..."

2. The Electronic Conception of Valence and the Constitution of Benzene by Harry Shipley Fry (1921)
"The present hypothesis has explained selective absorption by the occurrence of definitely described rearrangements of valencies within the electronic ..."

3. The Ancient World from the Earliest Times to 800 A.D. by Willis Mason West (1904)
"rearrangements in Greece. — The same year witnessed, important rearrangements in Greece. Various factions there had sympathized with Perseus in his hopeless ..."

4. The Ancient World from the Earliest Times to 800 A.D. by Willis Mason West (1904)
"rearrangements in Greece. — The same year witnessed important rearrangements in Greece. Various factions there had sympathized with Perseus in his hopeless ..."

5. The Chemistry of the Non-benzenoid Hydrocarbons and Their Simple Derivatives by Benjamin Talbott Brooks (1922)
"rearrangements Rearrangement of carbocyclic structures to substances having a different number of carbon atoms in the ring is occasionally observed in the ..."

6. Modern History: Europe, from Charlemagne to the Present Time by Willis Mason West (1907)
"I. THE CONGRESS OF VIENNA —rearrangements. 376. Call and Composition of the Congress. — Napoleon had wiped away the old map of Europe, and now, in turn, ..."

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