re-earn
English
Verb
re-earn (third-person singular simple present re-earns, present participle re-earning, simple past and past participle re-earned or re-earnt)
- Alternative form of reearn
- 1998 September 10, Paul Hayward, “Whistle blows on the past as United go fast forward”, in The Daily Telegraph, number 44,550, page 42:
- It is the narcotic of the football itself that draws people in, makes them travel miles from home on wet nights, part with money that will have to be re-earnt at the workplace the next day.
- 2013, Seth Godin, Whatcha Gonna Do With That Duck?: And Other Provocations, 2006-2012, →ISBN:
- The humble brand understands that it needs to re-earn attention, re-earn loyalty, and reconnect with its audience as if every day is the first day.
- 2013, Monique Reece, Michael Tasner, Tony Davila, How to Innovate in Marketing, →ISBN:
- To do this, we understood that we had to earn and re-earn our hospitality reputation every day, one customer at a time, 50 million times a day.
- 2015, Stan Slap, Under the Hood: Fire Up and Fine-Tune Your Employee Culture, →ISBN:
- Your culture used to know its job; now you're changing that job, and it has to relearn then re-earn its competence.
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