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
And the cycle of inequity repeats over and over, especially for people who were never invited into those rooms to begin with.—Julia Korn, Forbes.com, 25 July 2025 Add to that the many original performers repeating their roles, the constant callbacks and the non-stop nostalgia, and the result is less a continuation than an exercise in fan service.—Frank Scheck, HollywoodReporter, 25 July 2025
Noun
That love and pride is reciprocal: In San Juan, a day before his show this Friday, bars and cars blasted his music on repeat.—Julyssa Lopez, Rolling Stone, 26 July 2025 Chelsea will host Manchester United at Stamford Bridge in a repeat of the 2023-24 season’s final day in which the west London side won 6-0 at Old Trafford to clinch their fifth title.—Megan Feringa, New York Times, 25 July 2025
Adjective
Major League Baseball hasn’t had a repeat World Series champion since the New York Yankees pulled off a three-peat more than two decades ago.—Don Yaeger, Forbes.com, 17 June 2025 Boho cowgirl fusion, moto boots, and decorative head scarves were repeat occurrences.—Cierra Black, Essence, 28 Apr. 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
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