Get Free Checker

revivalist

[ UK /ɹɪvˈa‍ɪvəlˌɪst/ ]
[ US /ɹiˈvaɪvəɫɪst/ ]
NOUN
  1. a preacher of the Christian gospel

How To Use revivalist In A Sentence

  • What good did come from my first crusade was due chiefly to him; a kind of revivalist spirit was upon him, and many unsuspecting freshers who had only thought of the river as a place to avoid, were unable to resist his entreaties. Godfrey Marten, Undergraduate
  • A revivalist stomp and blissed-out sludge chords fight for transcendence in ‘Dead for a Sun.’
  • There they fell under the influence of activist revivalists and reformers.
  • Revivalist Islamic groups are amongst the most deadly.
  • He simply exhorts parents, in the tradition of the uplifting revivalist, to do the things that will focus their kids on school and prepare them for better lives.
  • As a Daptone label project -- and in the age of Saadiq and Barkley -- it could be called "revivalist", save for the fact that Bradley was born in '48 and knows this sound intimately. Michael Vazquez: Huffington Post Exclusive Music World Premiere: On The Twentieth Anniversary Of Nevermind, SPIN Curates A Tribute Album (Audio)
  • Booth was a revivalist intent on his Christian vocation.
  • Fundamentalist religion also has the same kind of revivalist streak that see in Confucius. Néojaponisme » Blog Archive » Blogging the Analects 1
  • The Revivalist home styles of the 1920s brought a craze for wall sconces - another gaslight derivative - but the fashion had largely died out by the end of that decade.
  • In colonial days the Presbyterians had mastered the competitive revivalist styles; now they carried their learned ministry to the West.
View all