When you reread, you will be able to better distinguish the gems from the tripe.
From the telegraph.co.uk
I had to stop and reread the article to make sure that wasn't an error in units.
From the newscientist.com
She reread the book and immediately recognized the quality of Thomas'adaptation.
From the denverpost.com
Regarding anthropogenic climate change, go back and reread what I wrote earlier.
From the economist.com
It blew me away then, and it did so again just now as I reread it for this post.
From the scienceblogs.com
I just reread my comment, plus its context, and still feel exactly the same way.
From the en.wikipedia.org
I had to backtrack and reread to be certain the use of Lovelace referred to Ada.
From the en.wikipedia.org
I likely need to reread the novel once more which I try and do every 4-5 years.
From the forbes.com
I've since reread the review and honestly think you should take up a challenge.
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
Read anew; read again; "He re-read her letters to him"
Proofreading (also proof-reading) traditionally is the reading of a galley proof of text or art to detect and correct production errors. Computerization has required proofreaders to increasingly adopt skill-sets general to desktop publishing.
(rereading) A second or subsequent reading
(Re-reading) from Latin re (again) + lego (in the sense of "read"), referring to the repetition of scripture.
This is a setting in our software. When it is selected, our software will look at all of the data in the selected area from scratch to see if it is the same on the other end of the sync. ...