Examples of using Repurposing in English and their translations into Thai
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
You can do this by repurposing old content.
Of waste heat given off by electricity production.- The repurposing.
Recently, I wrote an article titled Repurposing Old Blog Content and Giving it a New Purpose.
Make your old content relevant again with fresh ideas for repurposing that content.
Content repurposing and updating as opposed to new content costs less in terms of time/money.
We need one to get a new repurposing plant.
This is where repurposing and reusing old content as new blog posts can help solve these issues.
It is a petrochemical by-product repurposing facility.
Another strategy is to employ content repurposing, which is a process that lets you recreate your post and convert it into different formats video, infographics, podcast.
TChat also maintains a blog archive of past chats- a great example of effectively repurposing content.
Once you have a strong list of articles you might consider for repurposing, go ahead and throw out any that are not evergreen.
Buffer sums up each BufferChat on their main blog, and they include embedded Tweets from participants, which is a nice way of rewarding their audience for taking part while also repurposing content.
Reselling, repurposing, or redistributing any Intellectual Property provided by us our contractors or our licensees without our prior written consent; or impersonating any person or entity or using a false name that you are not authorised to use;
More than 90 years after the first phone booth appeared on London streets, Servcorp is bringing them back and repurposing them in our own way.
Fountain is an example of a Readymade, where an artist sees something that already exists in the world then creatively repurposes it for art. So far, a lot of social research in the digital age has involved repurposing data that created for some purpose other than research. Photo by Alfred Stiglitz, 1917. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
Fonteyraud itself dates back to the 12th century, and once housed thousands of nuns before Napoleon saved it from destruction, repurposing it as a penitentiary in 1804.