Synonym: bring back, refresh, regenerate, renew, restore, resurrect, resuscitate, revivify. Similar words: revived, review, brevity, previous, revision, survive, abbreviate, previously. Meaning: [rɪ'vaɪv] v. 1. cause to regain consciousness 2. give new life or energy to 3. be brought back to life, consciousness, or strength 4. restore from a depressed, inactive, or unused state 5. return to consciousness.
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31) Now comes a book that tries to revive loyalty.
32) I did not revive his son.
33) Consumer spending could revive the drooping economy.
34) Portions or aspects of his earlier self revive.
35) Both the leading candidates advocated free market policies and foreign investment to revive the stagnant economy.
36) The workman died at the scene despite efforts to revive him.
37) Many congressmen are keen to revive research into renewable energy sources like solar and wind power.
38) I blew over its mouth and nose to revive it even though my tears were rolling on to its face.
39) To mention him would be to revive an old humiliation.
40) Nearly everyone had a very positive outlook and the plans for action to revive the area were discussed.
40) Sentencedict.com is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words.
41) Firemen who pulled him from the inferno looked on anxiously as off-duty technician James McDonald tried to revive him.
42) Paramedics rushed him to the hospital, but could not revive him.
43) But whether that amounts to a positive incentive for companies to boost production and revive investment plans is open to doubt.
44) The first merit of P. N. Furbank's admirable biography is that it should revive interest in Diderot.
45) Despite desperate attempts to revive her, the trace remained stubbornly flat, until in the end they had to give up.
46) Up to the infamous Distillers bid, Saunders did much to revive the brewing group's fortunes and expand its activities.
47) It is perhaps not fortuitous that Stein made the enormous effort to revive the publication when he did.
48) Cuts in personal and business taxation and social insurance levies are a top priority, to revive weak investment.
49) The commission said it could revive the subpoenas if the editors failed to cooperate with the inquiry, which opens this week.
50) One idea is to revive a bill put forward in 1991, in the wake of a previous corruption scandal.
51) For two decades, the town leaders tried to revive it and rebuild it and rename it.
52) It was essentially a new attempt to revive the Burkeian fallacy of empire through freedom, obedience through liberty.
53) The 35-year-old Beane is faced with the daunting challenge of trying to revive the fortunes of a once-successful organization.
54) He muttered an invocation but the machine's soul had perished and did not revive.
55) While the oven and the dough are warming up, the yeast may revive and give forth one final push.
56) She also tried hard to revive interest in Idomeneo, thus proving that she was no musical ignoramus.
57) In those circumstances, if she returned or offered to return, her husband's liability to maintain her would revive.
58) It has a tourist potential which is bound to revive as the election images of intimidation fade.
59) An attempt to revive the contest in 1871 failed, as did another in 1882.
60) By simply massaging it on to your scalp every week you can revive and restore your tired tresses.
More similar words: revived, review, brevity, previous, revision, survive, abbreviate, previously, abbreviation, judicial review, preventive, vivid, convivial, survivor, survival, vivacious, vivisection, conviviality, evil, evince, evict, Rev., device, levity, devise, deviant, deviate, alleviate, evident, peevish.