Recommence in a sentence as a verb

Will that recommence? Perhaps, but there as a bit of the old Microsoft tactics at play here.

Presumably shelling would recommence if they tried to take it out again afterwards.

It's not like there's a great nationwide backlog of sewing that can finally recommence because people can finally thread their needles again.

Surely your boss should have the right to contact you, but you should have the right not to answer until your working hours recommence? Is Portugal deciding that the very act of sending a message creates some kind of coercive pressure to work?

Even though plant construction has recommenced, it's not possible to catch up. So the pressure groups have actually engendered a situation where a safety problem is more likely.

It’s the recovery time that is the issue – and the time to when you can recommence harvesting, sustainably." Of course these people are heavily biased, and the industry is rotten to the core and full of corruption, but it's hard to argue against this self-evident logic.

I'm talking about the end of the sentence: "let's do it again" translated as "il faut recommencer". If you say "il faut recommencer", it means "we have to do this again because it was bad". In French when you "recommence", it's because you've failed to do something properly, the exact opposite of what you're trying to say here.

Recommence definitions

verb

cause to start anew; "The enemy recommenced hostilities after a few days of quiet"

verb

begin again; "we recommenced his reading after a short nap"