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invigoration

[ UK /ɪnvˌɪɡəɹˈe‍ɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. quality of being active or spirited or alive and vigorous
  2. the activity of giving vitality and vigour to something

How To Use invigoration In A Sentence

  • The panelists agreed that recent moves indicate "reinvigoration" of the former Clinton policies, whereby then-secretary of state Madeleine Albright worked assiduously to go to war on behalf of Kosovo. Toronto Sun
  • The reinvigoration of a 75 year old cultural agenda signals, if we're not mistaken, a shift in culture.
  • The hope passes psychological adjustment, you can handle similar case correctly, make him invigoration.
  • And here was Kennedy -- John Kennedy -- it looked as though we were going to have that kind of reinvigoration, if you will, of New Deal governmental activism. Energy in the Executive: The Case for a Strong Presidency
  • For especially valuable treatments of this trend -- written long before the Court's recent reinvigoration of the "newsworthiness" doctrine -- see, e.g., Robert Post, THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONCEPT OF PUBLIC DISCOURSE: OUTRAGEOUS OPINION, DEMOCRATIC DELIBERATION, AND HUSTLER MAGAZINE v. Balkinization
  • A seismic shift in Washington is a prerequisite for the reinvigoration of equity markets. Equity Markets Need a Seismic Shift in Washington
  • McKean retrained as a beauty therapist and, putting her knowledge of patient care to good use, set up Invigoration, a hospital-based beauty therapy service.
  • It is right that the world now looks to a reinvigoration of higher education in Africa.
  • The third pillar of our foreign policy approach is the one I will focus on this evening, namely the reinvigoration of A New Era of Engagement with the World - The Hon Stephen Smith MP, Minister for Foreign Affairs
  • I'll do it again if I'm in need of reinvigoration.
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