How to Use rehash in a Sentence

rehash

1 of 2 verb
  • You're just rehashing the same argument all over again.
  • No one wants to rehash things — living life twice is one too many times.
    Hilton Dresden, The Hollywood Reporter, 31 May 2023
  • One of the latest scams rehashes the old toll road texts.
    Susan Tompor, Freep.com, 23 Mar. 2026
  • Try new ideas instead of rehashing the same one over and over again.
    Sydney Bucksbaum, EW.com, 23 Sep. 2019
  • Robinson didn’t want to rehash what happened on the day he was shot.
    Mark Inabinett | [email protected], al, 5 Oct. 2022
  • So all these things, Dana, are being rehashed out all over again.
    Dana Taylor, USA Today, 29 May 2026
  • There’s no need to rehash all of the reasons for their Sisyphean woes here.
    Chad Finn, BostonGlobe.com, 19 Aug. 2022
  • No need to rehash history in this case.
    José Criales-Unzueta, Vanity Fair, 1 Mar. 2026
  • So it’s been cool to kind of go down memory lane and rehash that and share that with my best friends.
    Cat Cardenas, Vulture, 21 June 2023
  • Can that be done without rehashing the many missteps of the past four years?
    The Denver Post Editorial Board, Denver Post, 16 Sep. 2025
  • At the end of the game, the players sat in a circle and rehashed what happened.
    Dallas News, 4 Feb. 2020
  • Dodge these common mistakes to avoid having to rehash them down the road.
    David Rae, Forbes, 20 Apr. 2021
  • The tiny upstairs space is best for rehashing the day and catching up with friends.
    Evie Carrick, Travel + Leisure, 10 Nov. 2025
  • Then there were the many news events of 2017 that don’t need rehashing.
    Kyle Dickman, Outside Online, 20 June 2018
  • This could be a great time to rehash a discussion from the past — or even reach out to an old flame and catch up.
    Kyle Thomas, PEOPLE, 9 Nov. 2025
  • The Mauers almost always convene for a postgame meal to rehash a game’s events.
    Tris Wykes, Twin Cities, 21 Oct. 2025
  • The ladies come together for a virtual sit-down to rehash a season of highs and lows.
    Washington Post, 2 Sep. 2020
  • Derailer has a large deck overlooking the slopes, which is a great place to soak up the sun and rehash the ski day.
    Evie Carrick, Travel + Leisure, 29 Dec. 2025
  • And for the most part, the filing rehashes a lot of those recent public statements.
    Jon Blistein, Rolling Stone, 15 Sep. 2023
  • Conversations in the morning might need to be rehashed at a later point.
    BostonGlobe.com, 10 July 2018
  • Art did not need to rest content with memoir or endlessly rehash trauma.
    Sara Holdren, Vulture, 1 Dec. 2025
  • Goldberg’s comments seemed to rehash the age-old trope about the dearth of qualified women.
    Stacy Perman, latimes.com, 6 June 2019
  • Bush didn’t rehash any of that history in his statement on Tuesday.
    Tom Benning, Dallas News, 2 June 2020
  • After Jackson got in his car, the trooper and deputies rehashed what happened.
    Todd J. Gillman, Dallas News, 15 Aug. 2023
  • These are quick 30-seconds ads, at most, that rehash some of the events in the previous trailers.
    Chris Smith, BGR, 22 Nov. 2021
  • And an obituary hardly seems the time to rehash old disagreements.
    Judith Martin, Washington Post, 4 Dec. 2019
  • But none of that contentious history was rehashed at the groundbreaking.
    Marci Shatzman, Sun-Sentinel.com, 10 May 2018
  • The two then bickered in the storage closet and rehashed why their relationship didn’t work out.
    Dana Rose Falcone, Peoplemag, 11 July 2023
  • On Tuesday evening, Kidd saw no point in rehashing the events leading to the trade and his role, if any.
    Brad Townsend, Dallas Morning News, 31 Mar. 2026
  • There is no point rehashing here the journey that Southgate took the England team on.
    Jack Pitt-Brooke, New York Times, 10 June 2026

rehash

2 of 2 noun
  • But anymore, many of them are just rehashes of what came in years ago.
    Max Londberg and Laura Bauer, kansascity.com, 7 June 2017
  • That this was not a rehash was among the reasons Vikander signed on.
    New York Times, 6 June 2022
  • Stuff the typical fan wouldn’t think of are given a quick rehash.
    Robert Avery, Houston Chronicle, 7 Aug. 2019
  • Is there any better place on earth to regroup, rehash, and — cheers, dears — retox?
    Hudson Morgan, Town & Country, 1 June 2011
  • And yet, don't let the familiar faces fool you into thinking this film is just a rehash of past events.
    Christian Holub, EW.com, 6 Dec. 2021
  • The 90-minute remarks were a rehash of his old grievances, lies and attacks.
    Philip Elliott, Time, 28 June 2021
  • That or come up with some new conflicts that don’t feel like a rehash of better (or at least older) seasons.
    Erik Kain, Forbes, 12 Sep. 2021
  • Much of the trial felt like a rehash of a workplace complaint gone horribly wrong.
    Nicole Hong, New York Times, 9 Mar. 2020
  • But largely a rehash and yet this dominated for a couple days.
    Fox News, 21 May 2018
  • Even the stage patter felt canned, a rehash of her United Center script.
    Kevin Williams, chicagotribune.com, 4 Aug. 2019
  • There will be plenty of time later to join the fray as guys like me rehash whether the right person won, who got cheated, blah, blah, blah.
    Chuck Yarborough, cleveland.com, 28 Jan. 2018
  • Thankfully, each is its own entity and not simply a rehash of the other.
    Mike Postalakis, SPIN, 29 Apr. 2022
  • Boot’s latest is just a rehash of his last column, and the one before that, and even the 30 or so before that.
    Isaac Schorr, National Review, 20 Oct. 2020
  • But its use here feels just off-center enough to fit into this unique show, rather than as a rehash of what’s been done dozens of times in the past elsewhere.
    Alan Sepinwall, Rolling Stone, 6 Sep. 2023
  • Wiener’s book has been reviewed extensively, and Fowler’s is a rehash of a viral blog post from three years ago.
    Arielle Pardes, Wired, 24 Feb. 2020
  • Unfortunately, more is not better in the case of this silly rehash.
    Chris Ball, cleveland.com, 25 Feb. 2018
  • So that alone is going to be like, OK, this, at the very least, isn’t going to feel like a rehash of season one.
    Lisa Weidenfeld, The Hollywood Reporter, 8 May 2017
  • So don’t expect a rehash of last year’s electric three-game series between these Big 12 teams.
    Nick Moyle, San Antonio Express-News, 7 Jan. 2022
  • Some new concepts aren’t new at all, just a rehash of what was promised at a World’s Fair almost 80 years ago.
    Ed Wallace, star-telegram, 21 Apr. 2018
  • Isn’t the truth that culture advances not through pure acts of novelty or total rehashes of what’s done before, but through blends?
    Spencer Kornhaber, The Atlantic, 28 June 2018
  • And the Daniels managed to make an opening credits that was unique to their style without being a rehash of their most famous work.
    Vulture, 10 Mar. 2023
  • The last thing American letters need is a John Updike rehash.
    Mark Athitakis, Los Angeles Times, 15 Sep. 2023
  • His pointed writing and even most left-field production mark him as a student of Nas and the like, but this is new and not atavistic rehash.
    Spin Staff, SPIN, 26 Jan. 2022
  • Readers will here be spared a rehash of the facts, other than as noted to be of interest by the Tenth Circuit.
    Jay Adkisson, Forbes, 13 May 2022
  • Does Mark feel like a rehash of tomboy Darlene with a feint toward modern attitudes about gender roles?
    Kelly Lawler, USA TODAY, 9 Mar. 2018
  • Much of the opening statements was a rehash of pre-trial briefs that the DOJ and Google filed last week.
    Ashley Belanger, Ars Technica, 12 Sep. 2023
  • Don’t rely on the official media rehash, the social media snippets and the talking heads to tell you what happened.
    Mary Schmich, Star Tribune, 29 Sep. 2020
  • Saartj Hamtramck won't just be a rehash of his New Orleans lunch counter, however.
    Mark Kurlyandchik, Detroit Free Press, 26 Mar. 2018
  • As superhero films, reboots and spinoffs get creaky, moviegoers are looking for stories that don’t feel like retreads or rehashes.
    Brent Lang, Variety, 18 June 2026
  • As all this goes on, President Obama continues to star in his weird rehash of The Queen .
    Andrew Moseman, Discover Magazine, 8 June 2010

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'rehash.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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