revival - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
revival (countable and uncountable, plural revivals)
- The act of reviving, or the state of being revived.
- Reanimation from a state of languor or depression; applied to health, a person's spirits, etc.
2021 April 20, Rafael Behr, “The future of the United Kingdom depends on a Labour revival in England”, in The Guardian[1]:
It is hard to sell a democratic partnership of nations from a stall that only stocks Conservative governments. Unionism needs a Labour revival in England.
- Renewed interest, performance, cultivation, or flourishing state of something, as of culture, commerce, agriculture.
2002 December 30, Anthony Tommasini, “A Seducer In a Revival Of a Revival”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN:
The Met's recent revival of Jürgen Flimm's powerful production of Beethoven's “Fidelio,” another highlight of the 2000-1 season, was a similar letdown. But revivals of great productions don't always have to be disappointments, as the Met's current presentation of Poulenc's “Dialogues des Carmélites” makes clear.
2021 June 16, Joe Muggs, quoting Ben UFO, “Subwoofers at the ready! The jungle and drum’n’bass revival is upon us”, in The Guardian[3]:
But then, this isn’t even the first time these genres are back, back, back. As DJ Ben UFO says: “There have been ‘jungle revivals’ regularly for at least as long as I’ve been DJing.”
2024 October 30, Paul Bigland, “The heat is on... and will the railway fray?”, in RAIL, number 1021, page 48:
After crossing the flatlands Lincoln, with its magnificent hilltop cathedral, comes into view before we pull into the station, with its lovely Tudor revival-style buildings.
- Renewed prevalence of something, as a practice or a fashion.
the revival of hot pants
2022 January 12, John Ortved, quoting Kat Frey, “That Cloud of Smoke Is Not a Mirage”, in The New York Times[4], →ISSN:
Kat Frey, a 25-year-old copywriter who lives in Brooklyn, picked up the habit last year. “We’re having a very sexy and ethereal 1980s revival, and smoking is part of that,” she said. “A lot of people I know are posting pictures doing it. I’m doing it. It’s having its moment for sure.”
- (religion) Renewed interest in religion, after indifference and decline; a period of religious awakening; special religious interest.
2006, Michael P. Young, Bearing Witness Against Sin:
As the revivals died down in the 1740s, the revivalist camp made concessions to their opponents, admonished prorevivalists who continued with the hostilities, and generally sought to heal divisions.
2012, Megan Adamson Sijapati, Islamic Revival in Nepal: Religion and a New Nation[5], Routledge, →ISBN:
This book offers a view into a growing movement of Islamic revival as it is taking place in the small, historically Hindu kingdom of Nepal on the northern Himalayan edge of the Indian subcontinent.
- (law) Restoration of force, validity, or effect; renewal; reinstatement of a legal action.
the revival of a debt barred by limitation
the revival of a revoked will
- (chemistry) Revivification, as of a metal.
reviving
- Belarusian: адраджэ́нне n (adradžénnje)
- Bulgarian: оживяване (bg) n (oživjavane)
- Esperanto: revivigo
- French: renaissance (fr) f, résurrection (fr) f
- German: Wiederbelebung (de) f
- Hebrew: תחייה (t'khiyá)
- Hungarian: felélesztés (hu), feléledés (hu)
- Italian: risveglio (it) m
- Japanese: 復活 (ja) (fukkatsu)
- Maori: whakaoranga, whakahaumanutanga, haumanutanga
- Russian: оживле́ние (ru) n (oživlénije), возрожде́ние (ru) n (vozroždénije)
- Scottish Gaelic: ath-bheothachadh m
- Spanish: reviviscencia (es) f
- Volapük: dönulifükam,
- Walloon: ravicaedje (wa) m, ravicance (wa) f
renewed interest, performance etc.
- Belarusian: адраджэ́нне n (adradžénnje)
- Bulgarian: оживление (bg) (oživlenie)
- Hungarian: felelevenítés (hu), felújítás (hu) (performance)
- Italian: rinnovamento (it) m, rinvigorimento (performance)
- Japanese: 復活 (ja) ((fukkatsu))
- Portuguese: reavivamento (pt) m
- Russian: возобновле́ние (ru) n (vozobnovlénije), оживле́ние (ru) n (oživlénije) (performance)
- Scottish Gaelic: ath-bheothachadh m
- Spanish: revivificación f, revitalización f, reavivación f, reavivamiento m
- Walloon: rivicaedje (wa) m
renewed interest in religion
- French: réveil (fr) m
- German: Erweckung f
- Hungarian: megújulás (hu), megújhodás (hu)
- Italian: risveglio (it) m, rinnovamento (it) m
- Japanese: 復活 (ja) ((fukkatsu))
- Malagasy: fifohazana (mg)
- Portuguese: avivamento m
- Russian: возрожде́ние (ru) n (vozroždénije), ревива́ль m (reviválʹ)
- Scottish Gaelic: ath-bheothachadh m, dùsgadh m
- Spanish: avivamiento (es)
Translations to be checked
- Czech: obrození n
- Dutch: heropleving (nl) f
- Esperanto: reviviĝo
- Polish: odrodzenie (pl), ożywienie (pl), przebudzenie n
- Russian: возрожде́ние (ru) n (vozroždénije), оживле́ние (ru) n (oživlénije), восстановле́ние (ru) n (vosstanovlénije), возобновле́ние (ru) n (vozobnovlénije)
- Telugu: పునరుజ్జీవనం (punarujjīvanaṁ)
revival m (plural revivaux)
- “revival”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Borrowed from English revival.
revival m
- ^ revival in Luciano Canepari, Dizionario di Pronuncia Italiana (DiPI)
- revival in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
revival m (plural revivales)