regroup
ree groohp
- v organize anew, as after a setback
- v reorganize into new groups
- And why pick someone who is known to have an ax to grind with the White House at a time when the party should regroup and unify? The answer is that Lott won (by one vote over .
- Like the Taliban in the late 1990s in Afghanistan, the jihadists are believed to be providing leaders of al-Qaeda with the protection they need to regroup and train new operatives.
- The allies were determined to give them no breathing space to pull themselves together to make a stand -- or to regroup for an assault on the American Army, which had cut them off .