with objectTo subjugate, subdue, or subject again.
Origin
Late 18th century; earliest use found in Catharine Macaulay (1731–1791), historian and political polemicist. From re- + subject. Compare earlier re-subjected, re-subjection, and unsubject.
Definition of resubject in US English:
resubject
verbˌriːsəbˈdʒɛkt
with objectTo subjugate, subdue, or subject again.
Origin
Late 18th century; earliest use found in Catharine Macaulay (1731–1791), historian and political polemicist. From re- + subject. Compare earlier re-subjected, re-subjection, and unsubject.