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start over

  1. Begin again, as in This article is no good; I'll have to start over. [Early 1900s]



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Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“The beautiful thing about the postseason is that once we get to the postseason, everything starts at zero. You can have a bad year and you flip the script and you start over in the postseason. You have a good postseason, help the team win, and nobody ever remembers what you did in the regular season.”

The error would be for Americans to be surprised when the boulder rolls back down – shocked that there was no progress and that everyone has to start over again.

From Salon

It was a decision made by Russell, who believed his school needed to start over.

Sheard is either a glutton for punishment or determined to prove his worth no matter how many times Narbonne has to start over.

The resulting mess, he said, left him with no choice but to start over with a clean pate.

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start outStar Trek