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Graffiti in Antwerp combines the English word, "Rethink" with Chinese letter styling. Rethinking, reconsidering, or reconsideration, is the process of reviewing a decision or conclusion that has previously been made to determine whether the initial decision should be changed. Rethinking can occur immediately after a decision has been reached ...
Your comment, "I hope you reconsider your uncalled for remarks and remove them," could easily be interpreted as a threat of legal action, especially when preceded by the statement, "The terms you used to describe the High Court of Delhi constitute [libel]" and a reference to a US court decision concerning journalists (which Wikipedians are not).
A matter that was voted on could be brought back again through the motion to reconsider.Under Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised (RONR), this motion must be made within a limited time after the action on the original motion: either on the same day or in the case of a multi-day session (such as a convention), on the next day within the session in which business is conducted.
He stressed that the United Nations' health agency regretted the decision by the leader of the U.S. — by far the agency's biggest donor — and hoped "the new administration will reconsider it."
The consequences of this decision are more than a matter of funding. U.S. scientists and health workers provide vital expertise and knowledge, through overseas deployment and through U..S-based ...
On January 8, 2021, Scott urged Trump to reconsider his decision to skip Biden’s inauguration, saying Trump should attend even though “I can imagine losing an election is very hard.”
The FDA sent a letter last week stating that while the decision is in a reevaluation period, it will not enforce the timeline — and, once it has made a decision, there will be an additional two ...
In your example it is followed by a specifying phrase that cannot occur for actual proper names. Proper names cannot be followed by "that", because "that" introduces a restrictive (specifying) phrase, which is necessary when using common nouns to clarify which instance of the common noun is being referred to, but makes no sense with proper names.