How to Use restart in a Sentence

restart

verb
  • They plan to restart negotiations next week.
  • The tournament will restart tomorrow.
  • The care providers were able to restart Jackson’s heart.
    Jessica Bartlett, BostonGlobe.com, 29 Apr. 2023
  • Some of us learn from it; some of us restart the cycle again (and again).
    Jailynn Taylor, Allure, 30 Apr. 2025
  • Well, some of those have restarted in terms of Venezuela.
    CBS News, 31 Dec. 2023
  • Now, restart the console one last time, and the issue should be fixed.
    James Peckham, PC Magazine, 12 June 2025
  • France has at last reopened, which means the search for the best Airbnbs in Paris can restart in earnest.
    Elise Taylor, Vogue, 28 June 2021
  • Rich people were able to leave, but the poor did not have the funds to restart elsewhere.
    Jeremy Ney, Time, 21 May 2025
  • Kyle Larson and Ross Chastain will restart in the lead.
    Shane Connuck, Charlotte Observer, 23 Feb. 2025
  • Once that's done, restart your device and try logging in to the Play Store again.
    Wired, 12 July 2022
  • Both sides have insisted that the other needs to make the first move to restart talks.
    John Koblin, New York Times, 8 May 2023
  • William Byron and Chase Elliott will restart on the front row.
    Shane Connuck, Charlotte Observer, 7 Apr. 2024
  • An attempt to restart the computer the next day failed.
    Sudiksha Kochi, USA TODAY, 22 June 2021
  • Now’s a good time to reset and restart your social life.
    Dallas News, 1 Sep. 2021
  • The followers stayed, while the feed was wiped clean and restarted.
    Nicole Fallert, USA TODAY, 22 Jan. 2025
  • And if the user reinstalls or updates the app, the clock restarts.
    Emma Roth, The Verge, 9 Aug. 2024
  • For more than 40 minutes, the team performed CPR in hope of restarting the man’s heart, Gilder said.
    Raquel Coronell Uribe, NBC News, 23 July 2024
  • Her plan to restart her company in a few years went out the window.
    Fidel Martinez, Los Angeles Times, 10 May 2024
  • Grain shipments from Ukrainian ports on the Black Sea could restart very soon.
    Dalton Bennett, Washington Post, 30 July 2022
  • Cruise lines trying to restart in the U.S. have turned to vaccine requirements to speed the process along.
    Hannah Sampson, Anchorage Daily News, 11 June 2021
  • Ford cannot say when production will restart, Bergg told the Free Press.
    Phoebe Wall Howard, Detroit Free Press, 14 Feb. 2023
  • But there's still a whole summer break to go until schools restart.
    Anneken Tappe, CNN, 4 June 2021
  • Now Scandrick, 35, has been hired to restart the program in his first head coaching job.
    Los Angeles Times, 2 May 2022
  • The last tenth-and-a half, two-tenths are the hard part, [along with] learning when to go, how hard to go, how to qualify and restarts.
    Tim Ryan, Newsweek, 18 Dec. 2024
  • A few weeks ago, the heart of a friend stopped inexplicably in his sleep and didn’t restart.
    Heather Lanier, Longreads, 10 Jan. 2023
  • Some of them will simply sell rather than restart paying.
    Fortune, 12 Sep. 2021
  • Whether or not such a reduction could restart the AMOC and over what kind of timescale is an open question.
    The Physics Arxiv Blog, Discover Magazine, 7 Aug. 2024
  • By the time Somnath was ready to restart the hotel, its permits had expired.
    Catherine Carlock, BostonGlobe.com, 23 Nov. 2022
  • This didn't give much space for the driver — the leading driver — to take control of the group and go with the restarting procedure.
    Saajan Jogia, MSNBC Newsweek, 6 July 2025
  • At least two nuclear plants are scheduled to restart thanks to big tech partnerships.
    Bret Baier , Amy Munneke, FOXNews.com, 3 July 2025

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'restart.' 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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