(1) The last code segment shows how to reposition the sound source location and the orientation and position of the listener.(2) we are trying to reposition the brand with a premium image(3) One can modify a product, reposition it, withdraw it from a market, suggest improvements but the same can't be said of nation branding.(4) It's during this period that CAs decide to become partners, move to industry positions, or reposition themselves in non-traditional roles.(5) We're using the downturn to reposition our business to better prepare for the trends we see downstream.(6) Later, his mother would tidy the sofa and reposition the pillow, inadvertently noticing the smell of the ocean captured in its fibers.(7) We were able to rethink, redesign, repackage, and reposition our products from a viewpoint of how people use particular padlocks and in what contexts they use them.(8) But after a tepid response in the market during its first sales year, its creators decided to reposition their product as a milk beverage rather than a soda.(9) our assignment was to reposition coffee from a u201crite of passageu201d drink to a u201ccontemporary experience.u201d(10) McCain needed not only to create a strong position for himself but also to reposition the leader in the mind of the consumer/voter.(11) The shares are not liquid, the bid-offer spread is wide, and based on its assets and financial position it is hard to see how it can reposition itself strategically.(12) It has now emerged that he is also working, with a consortium, on repositioning the US hotel group, which lost $8 million on a web-based management system.(13) Regus can usually make the alterations overnight, repositioning the metal walls as if they were Lego bricks.(14) The clothing retailer, which has been repositioning its Peacock brand to include more fashionable products, said sales growth had slipped in the fourth quarter.(15) We stopped once outside, and here he repositioned his hat upon his head and lit a cigar, gesturing for me to take one.(16) By the end of the Middle Ages, churches such as Westminster Abbey or S. Denis were full of important tombs, and repositioning these monuments became necessary in order to accommodate yet more.