restate — UK US /ˌriːˈsteɪt/ verb [T] ► ACCOUNTING, FINANCE if a company restates its results, it calculates them again and announces a new amount for its profits, sales, etc.: »The company will have to restate earnings , converting reported profits to… … Financial and business terms
Restate — Re*state (r?*st?t ), v. t. To state anew. Palfrey. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
restate — 1713, from RE (Cf. re ) + STATE (Cf. state). Related: Restated; restating … Etymology dictionary
restate — [rē stāt′] vt. restated, restating to state again, esp. in a different way restatement n … English World dictionary
restate — [[t]ri͟ːste͟ɪt[/t]] restates, restating, restated VERB If you restate something, you say it again in words or writing, usually in a slightly different way. [FORMAL] [V n] He continued throughout to restate his opposition to violence... [V n] The… … English dictionary
restate — UK [ˌriːˈsteɪt] / US [ˌrɪˈsteɪt] verb [transitive] Word forms restate : present tense I/you/we/they restate he/she/it restates present participle restating past tense restated past participle restated to say or write something again or using… … English dictionary
restate briefly — index review Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
restate — transitive verb Date: circa 1713 to state again or in another way … New Collegiate Dictionary
restate — restatement, n. /ree stayt /, v.t., restated, restating. to state again or in a new way. [1705 15; RE + STATE] * * * … Universalium
restate — verb a) to state again b) to state differently; to rephrase Syn: rephrase, reword … Wiktionary