After his accident, he had to restructure his life.
Examples of restructure
restructure
Why go through a brutal recession for two or three years and restructure anyway?
From the bloomberg.com
Companies are having to restructure, and they're having to get more competitive.
From the businessweek.com
The guide provides tools to create, revamp or restructure an internship program.
From the tennessean.com
Now Mr. Obama is seeking to restructure the American image all across the world.
From the time.com
Zayat claims the bank reneged on agreements to restructure and extend the loans.
From the kentucky.com
If there is an agreement, the company would be able to restructure out of court.
From the chron.com
The move is a key step toward GM's efforts to restructure outside of bankruptcy.
From the usatoday.com
Over the past two decades, he has helped restructure dozens mired in bankruptcy.
From the washingtonpost.com
Frantic negotiations with its bankers enabled the firm to restructure its debts.
From the economist.com
More examples
Construct or form anew or provide with a new structure; "After his accident, he had to restructure his life"; "The governing board was reconstituted"
Restructuring is the corporate management term for the act of reorganizing the legal, ownership, operational, or other structures of a company for the purpose of making it more profitable, or better organized for its present needs. ...
(restructuring) A reorganization; an alteration of structure
(Restructuring) The reorganization of traditional monopoly electric service to allow operations and charges to be separated or "unbundled" into generation, transmission and distribution, and retail services. This allows customers to buy retail electric service from competing providers.
(Restructuring) The process of changing the structure of the electric power industry from one of guaranteed monopoly over service territories, as established by the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, to one of open competition between power suppliers for customers in any area.
(Restructuring) is the transformation from one representation form to another at the same relative abstraction level, while preserving the subject's system external behavior (functionality and semantics).
Restructuring is a step a company takes when it encounters problems. The primary reason for restructuring occurs when a company is in debt and needs to restructure its finances, management, and other key operations.
(Restructuring) Changes in the electric utility industry as a result of deregulation trends. Also refers to the reorganization of an electric utility. Sometimes used interchangeably with the term deregulation.
(RESTRUCTURING) The changing of terms and conditions of existing debts to give the debtor breathing space, ranging from a simple extension of the deadline for repayments, to a more radical shake-up.