We haven't met in a long time, so let me reintroduce myself.
Examples of reintroduce
reintroduce
Hopefully, this will reintroduce stability to the market and avoid foreclosures.
From the kentucky.com
Nor did shoppers respond when Penney started to reintroduce markdowns last year.
From the forbes.com
She said she plans to reintroduce the legislation next year if she's re-elected.
From the dailyherald.com
He and Watson practically had to reintroduce themselves to Woods on every green.
From the charlotteobserver.com
Blatter would like to reintroduce limits on foreign players in national leagues.
From the washingtonpost.com
If you're new to the God in Therapy posts, we'll reintroduce the theme, briefly.
From the blogs.psychcentral.com
Once this has been accomplished, you can reintroduce it into main article space.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Senate Democrats will now work to reintroduce anti-Second Amendment legislation.
From the infowars.com
Coming back to the AHL has allowed him to reintroduce those things to his game.
From the democratandchronicle.com
More examples
Introduce anew; "We haven't met in a long time, so let me reintroduce myself"
(reintroduction) an act of renewed introduction
Reintroduction is the deliberate release of species into the wild, from captivity or relocated from other areas where the species survives. It usually involves species that are endangered or extinct in the wild (EW). ...
(Re-introduction) An attempt to establish a wildlife species (or taxonomically defined unit within a wildlife species) in an area which was once part of its historical range, but from which it has been extirpated; re-establishment is a synonymy with the added caveat that the attempt has been ...
(reintroduction) a wildlife management technique used to place species back into an area where they had disappeared or become dangerously low in numbers.
To release a captive animalAny living thing that is not a plant. Most animals can move about freely. All use plants or other animals as food. All have sensory organs. back into its native habitatWhere an animal or plant normally lives and grows. in the wild.