Verb
Will you repeat the question?
He kept repeating the same thing over and over.
He often has to ask people to repeat themselves because he's a little deaf. Repeat after me: “I promise to do my best…”.
You are simply repeating, in slightly different words, what has been said already.
My five-year-old can repeat her favorite stories word for word. Noun
Most of the customers are repeats.
No, I don't want to watch that. It's a repeat.
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Verb
Catanzara, the aldermen and other advocates repeated their criticisms of the Pretrial Fairness Act and Lyke, arguing that had cash bail still been in place in Illinois or had Lyke made a different decision on Talley’s custody, Bartholomew’s life would have been saved.—Caroline Kubzansky, Chicago Tribune, 30 Apr. 2026 Instead, through projects like the ENIAC replica, students can leverage traits many of them share, like the abilities to hyperfocus and to precisely repeat tasks.—IEEE Spectrum, 30 Apr. 2026
Noun
OpenAI’s Vice President of Global Policy Ann O’Leary committed to improving the company’s systems for detecting repeat policy violators and other safeguards in a letter to Canadian Minister of Artificial Intelligence Evan Solomon in the wake of the shooting.—Clare Duffy, CNN Money, 29 Apr. 2026 The Stop That Reinvents Itself In the most populated city in the country, even repeat visitors find something new.—Lauren Schuster, Miami Herald, 29 Apr. 2026
Adjective
All are repeat nominees from last year, except Top, who replaces Jelly Roll.—Melinda Newman, Billboard, 18 Nov. 2025 The Phillies' season is now over, while the Dodgers are one step closer to reaching their goal of becoming the first repeat World Series champion in 25 years.—Noah Camras, MSNBC Newsweek, 10 Oct. 2025 See All Example Sentences for repeat
Word History
Etymology
Verb
Middle English repeten, from Middle French & Latin; Middle French repeter, from Old French, from Latin repetere to return to, repeat, from re- + petere to go to, seek — more at feather