[
US
/ɹiˈvaɪvd, ɹɪˈvaɪvd/
]
[ UK /ɹɪvˈaɪvd/ ]
[ UK /ɹɪvˈaɪvd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
given fresh life or vigor or spirit
stirred by revived hopes -
restored to consciousness or life or vigor
felt revived hope
How To Use revived In A Sentence
- In 1936 a Polish Anthropologist named Sula Benet discovered that in the original Hebrew text of the Old Testament the word "kaneh bosm" had been translated as calamus by the Greeks when they first rendered the Books in the 3rd century B.C., and then propagated as such in all future translations from the Greek as Hebrew ceased to be a spoken language, not again revived until the 1800's. Phelps and Obama-- leading the way Towards legalizing Marijuana.
- A similar problem came up yesterday in reading a Boris Akunin story called Strast' i dolg Passion and duty, set in an alternate Russia which has revived tsardom, along with its Table of Ranks and all the rest of the imperial paraphernalia. Languagehat.com: TRANSLATION PROBLEMS.
- The domino theory was revived. The Collins History of the World in the 20th Century
- With a glazed stare she revived for one last instant.
- But memories of prior political awakenings that ended disastrously were revived when the Polish military cracked down in 1981.
- And the third, a lapsed neopagan, revived her religious practice online and was the only one of the three who stayed there.
- A French, German, and Italian production that became another unprofitable film for Welles, the film was recently revived in a fully restored print.
- The air was fresh and for a moment she felt revived.
- Mehmet II, who collected Christian relics and occasionally watched a Christian service, even revived the Oecumenical patriarchate, the senior see of Orthodox Christianity.
- Older traditions of internationalism and isolationism have been revived and adapted to post-cold war conditions.