@rihannafan1 said in [Signing Suggestions & Rumours](/post/1525936) said:
@barnsta said in [Signing Suggestions & Rumours](/post/1525347) said:
@geo said in [Signing Suggestions & Rumours](/post/1525305) said:
Oh re-signed .. the - makes all the difference
Sorry about the grammer mistake was a touch excited by the news
Re-sign isn't a word. And if it is, the hyphen would be used for an unusual word, which in an NRL signings thread would probably be 're-sign' to mean when a player quit their contract.
Happy to be proved wrong, but the following is the way I understand the usage:
**Resign:**
used as a transitive verb, means to give up or relinquish something. Resign, used as an intransitive verb means to leave a position or job. In chess, when one resigns, one ends the game by conceding defeat. To be resigned means to accept the inevitable. Related words are resigns, resigned, resigning, resigner and resignation. Resign appears in the English language in the late fourteenth century with the meaning give up, surrender, abandon, submit, relinquish, coming from the Latin resignare, which means to check off, annul, cancel, give back, give up.
**Re-sign:**
is transitive verb which means to sign again. Re-sign may mean the physical signing of a document or the re-engagement of someone under contract with the expectation that another contract will be physically signed. Re-sign first appears in 1805.