different between rearrest vs dearrest

rearrest

English

Etymology

re- +? arrest

Verb

rearrest (third-person singular simple present rearrests, present participle rearresting, simple past and past participle rearrested)

  1. To arrest again.
    The police rearrested the suspect after finding new evidence linking him to the crime.

Noun

rearrest (plural rearrests)

  1. A second or subsequent arrest.

Anagrams

  • arrester

rearrest From the web:

  • what arrest means
  • what does rearrest ordered mean
  • what remand rearrest mean
  • what prevents rearrest from occurring
  • what do rearrest mean
  • what causes rearrest
  • what is a rearrest called


dearrest

English

Alternative forms

  • de-arrest

Etymology

de- +? arrest

Verb

dearrest (third-person singular simple present dearrests, present participle dearresting, simple past and past participle dearrested)

  1. To release (a person) from arrest.
    • BBC News, 2014 Oct 27, "Jogger in PM security alert had 'no idea' what happened"
      Around midday, a 28-year-old local man was briefly arrested after he came close to the prime minister's group who had just left the Civic Hall in Leeds. No threats were made, and after the man's details were checked, he was de-arrested and allowed on his way.

Anagrams

  • arrested, drearest, rastered, retrades, retreads, serrated, star-reed, treaders

dearrest From the web:

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