remaneuver
Etymology
From re- + maneuver.
remaneuver means an instance of remaneuvering. Lexicurio rates it Rare gem — a strength score of 77 out of 100.
noun
- An instance of remaneuvering.“Timothy belatedly thought to ask, for no reason at all that he could think of, asked of no one in particular, as if he had been delayed, his life delayed by multiplying introductions to life, but Philly Morris and Gloria Dehaven had abruptly turned their considerable backs, pretending, as a sudden, surprising remaneuver, perhaps, to ignore Timothy, to leave him awash in introductions, thereby fore”
verb
- To maneuver again, especially when the maneuver is to change or correct the result of the previous maneuver.“Maude Purvis was the granddaughter of an American Southern gentleman, Robert Louis Earle Purvis, who somehow mismaneuvered himself into association with the Yankees during the Civil War and quickly thereafter remaneuvered himself to distant Batavia where he found a happy and prosperous haven .”