revive
suomi-englanti sanakirjarevive englannista suomeksi
elpyä
elävöittää
elvyttää
virota
Verbi
palauttaa tuotantoon">palauttaa tuotantoon transitive, palata tuotantoon">palata tuotantoon intransitive
Substantiivi
revive englanniksi
(senseid) To cause (a person or animal) to recover from a faint; to cause (a person or animal) to return to a state of consciousness.
(nearsyn)
(ux)
(RQ:Defoe Crusoe)
(RQ:Burroughs Tarzan of the Apes) realized that he had shot his friend and protector, Tarzan of the Apes. (..) Soon the cool water revived him, and presently he opened his eyes to look in questioning surprise at D'Arnot.
(senseid) To bring (a person or animal which is dead) back to life.
(synonyms)
(RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)
(RQ:Shakespeare Henry 4-2 Q1)
(RQ:Fuller Church History)
(RQ:Spectator)
(RQ:Gray Six Poems)
(RQ:Gibbon Roman Empire)
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) David Levi,(nb...)|volume=I|page=52|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_eighteenth-century_mahzor-le-rosh-ha-shana_1794/page/n281/mode/1up|oclc=85884485|passage=Thou, O in Judaism|(smallcaps)! ''art'' mighty for ever: it is thou vvho reviveſt the dead, ''and art'' mighty to ſave.
(RQ:Shelley Poetical Works) / I weep—my tears revive it not. / I sigh—it breathes no more on me; (..)
(RQ:Hawthorne Seven Gables) has made him such a laggard at this momentous dinner. It would all but revive a dead man!
(RQ:R. Macaulay Trebizond) sank into sleep and fell down three storeys and was taken up for dead but revived by the apostle, (..)
To cause (something) to recover from a state of decline, neglect, oblivion, or obscurity; to make (something) active or lively again; to reanimate, to revitalize.
(hypernyms)
(RQ:Surrey et al Songes)
(RQ:Virgil Stanyhurst Aeneid)
(RQ:Defoe New Voyage) Our Men vvere reviv'd vvith this Diſcovery, and all agreed to march back; ſo, having loſt about Six Days in this falſe ſtep, they got into the right VVay, (..)
(RQ:Swift Polite Conversation)
(RQ:Radcliffe Udolpho)
(RQ:Irving Tales of a Traveller)
(RQ:Disraeli Vivian Grey)"
(RQ:Froude England)'s reign the countess (quote-gloss) seems to have acknowledged his attentions with loyal regard, and if she had not forgotten her birth and her childhood, she never connected herself with the attempts which during that time were made to revive the feuds of the houses.
(RQ:London Children of the Frost)
(quote-web) Dević|Marko Devic's shot clearly crossed the line before it was scrambled away by (w), only for the officials to remain unmoved. The incident immediately revived the debate about goal-line technology, with a final decision on whether it is introduced expected to be taken in Zurich on 5 July.
(RQ:Guardian) review – choose a sequel that doesn’t disappoint|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20251008021747/https://www.theguardian.com/film/2017/jan/19/t2-trainspotting-review-ewan-mcgregor-danny-boyle-sequel|passage=Boyle|(quote-gloss) Boyle revives some of the stylistic tics which found themselves being ripped off by geezer-gangster Britflicks back in the day, but now the freezeframes are briefer, sharper; the movie itself refers back to the original with variant flashback versions of famous scenes, but also Super 8-type images of the boys' poignant boyhood in primary school.
(quote-journal) considering various options including reviving the former London Underground depot at New Cross and sites at West Croydon and Crystal Palace.
(quote-journal)
To cause (a feeling, of mind, etc.) to back or return; to reactivate, to reawaken.
(RQ:Elyot Castel of Helth)
(RQ:Spenser Complaints)
(RQ:Bunyan Pilgrim's Progress), put ſtrength into (quote-gloss), and increaſe it in the ſoul (quote-gloss), even as it doth diſcover and forbid it, for it doth not give povver to ſubdue.
(RQ:Dryden Aeneis)
(RQ:Gray Works)
(RQ:Prescott Ferdinand and Isabella)
(RQ:Khayyam FitzGerald Rubaiyat)
(RQ:Woolf Mrs Dalloway)
To renew (something) in one's or people's memories or minds; to back (something) to (public) attention; to reawaken.
(RQ:Elyot Governour) had for redemed or reſtored&11805; and is properly called remembraunce.
(RQ:Nashe Pierce Penilesse) hath named me expreſſely in Print (as I will not do him) and accuſe me of want of learning, vpbraiding me for reuiuing in an epiſtle of mine the reuerent memory of Sir ''More|Thomas Moore'', Sir ''Iohn Cheeke'' (quote-gloss), Doctor ''Watſon'', Doctor ''Haddon'', Doctor ''Carre'', Maiſter Roger Ascham|(quote-gloss) ''Aſcham'', as if they were no meate but for his Maiſterſhips mouth, or none but ſome ſuch as the ſon of a ropemaker were worthy to mention them.
(RQ:Bacon Learning) I may reviue and reintegrate the miſapplyed and abuſed Name of (smallcaps), vvhich in the true ſenſe, is but (smallcaps), or (smallcaps): (..)
(RQ:T. Herbert Travaile)
(RQ:Locke Human Understanding), is the Povver to revive again in our Minds thoſe ''Ideas'', vvhich after imprinting have diſappeared, or have been as it vvere laid aſide out of Sight: And thus vve do, vvhen vve conceive Heat or Light, Yellovv or Svveet, the Object being removed: and this is ''Memory'', vvhich is at it vvere the Store-houſe of our ''Ideas''.
(RQ:Dryden Juvenal Satires)
(RQ:Guardian 1713)
(RQ:Swift Death)
(RQ:Burney Evelina)
(RQ:Stowe Uncle Tom's Cabin)
(RQ:Hardy Mayor of Casterbridge)
(RQ:Kipling Kim)
To make (something which has become faded or unclear) clear or fresh again; to refresh.
(RQ:Dickens Sketches by Boz) The truth flashed suddenly upon us—they had been "revived." 'Tis a deceitful liquid that black and blue reviver; we have watched its effects on many a shabby-genteel man. (..) The transient dignity of the unhappy man decreased in exact proportion as the "reviver" wore off.|footer=Referring to clothes having been treated with a (l).
(quote-book). Of the Chronology of the Four Masters.|title=Lectures on the Manuscript Materials of Ancient Irish History.(nb...)|location=Dublin|publisher=Duffy (Irish publisher)|James Duffy,(nb...)|year_published=1861|page=150|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/lecturesonmanus00ocur/page/150/mode/1up|oclc=234101398|passage=(..) I applied to the Council of the Academy, (..) for liberty to apply a proper preparation to the part of the vellum which appeared blank before the name O'Donnell, and between it and the margin of the page. The academy complied with my request. I took the necessary means of reviving the ink, and in a little time I was rewarded by the plain and clear reappearance of what had not been before dreamt of. There, surely enough, were the name and the title of "Bonaventura O'Donnell", with the words added, "Jubilate Lector".
To restore (a metal (especially mercury) or other substance in a compound or mixture) to its pure or unmixed state.
(RQ:Culpeper Physicall Directory)
To give new validity to (a law or instrument); to reenact, to revalidate.
(RQ:Elyot Governour)
(RQ:Edward Hall Lancastre & Yorke)
(RQ:Blackstone Commentaries) V continued in full force: but yet is conſidered as extinct by the ſtatute 14 IV|Edw(quote-gloss) IV. c(quote-gloss) 4. vvhich revives and confirms all ſtatutes and ordinances made before the acceſſion of the houſe of York againſt breakers of amities, truces, leagues, and ſafe-conducts, vvith an expreſs exception to the ſtatutes of 2 Hen. V.
To on a new production of (a musical, play, or other stage performance; also, a film or programme).
(RQ:Heywood Pleasant Dialogues) as it vvas laſt revived at the ''Cock-pit'', in vvhich the Author taxeth the moſt corrupted copy novv imprinted, vvhich vvas publiſhed vvithout his conſent.|footer=A section heading.
(RQ:Tusser Good Husbandrie)
(RQ:Hall Contemplations) hadst herein no small respect to the faith of Raising of Jairus' daughter|Jairus, unto whose house thou wert going. That good man had but one only daughter, which lay sick in the beginning of his suit; ere the end, lay dead. (..) To make this good, by the touch of the verge of thy garment thou revivedst one from the verge of death.
To recover from a faint; to return to a state of consciousness.
(RQ:Palsgrave Lesclarcissement) y&877; I wene he wyll neuer reuyue againe (..)
(RQ:King James Version) had drunke, his ſpirit came againe, and he reuiued: (..)
(RQ:Milton Comus) / And through the porch, and inlet of each ſenſe / Dropt in ambroſial oyles till ſhe reviv'd, / And undervvent a quicke, immortall change / Made goddeſs of the river; (..)
(RQ:Homer Pope et al Odyssey)
(RQ:Blackstone Commentaries)
(RQ:Forster Angels)
(senseid) Of a dead person or animal: to be brought back to life.
(RQ:Tyndale NT) revived&11805; that he ſhuld be lorde both of deed and quicke.
(RQ:Shakespeare Henry 6-1)
(RQ:King James Version) heard the voice of (w); and the ſoul of the child came into him againe, and he reuiued.
(RQ:Pope Rape of the Lock)
Of a person, animal, or plant: to return to a state of health or vigour, especially after almost dying.
(RQ:Palsgrave Lesclarcissement)
(RQ:King James Version)
(RQ:Milton Paradise Lost)
(RQ:Shelley Posthumous Poems)
(RQ:MacDonald North Wind)
(RQ:Lawrence Lady Chatterley's Lover)
To recover from a state of decline, neglect, oblivion, or obscurity; to become active or lively again; to reanimate, to revitalize.
(RQ:Shakespeare Venus and Adonis)
(RQ:Freart Evelyn Painting)'', and ''(w)'' (vvho vvere the ''(w)'' and ''(w)''’s of the Modern ''Painters'') vve ſhould ſee the ''Art'' revive again vvith ſo much vigour, and flouriſh in ſo ſhort a ſpace.
(RQ:Pope Essay on Criticism)'s Golden Days, / ''Starts'' from her Trance, and trims her vvither'd Bays! / (..) / Then ''Sculpture'' and her ''Siſter-Arts'' revive; / ''Stones'' leap'd to ''Form'', and ''Rocks'' began to ''live''; (..)
(RQ:Goldsmith Polite Learning)
(RQ:Gibbon Roman Empire) and His Sons|page=334|passage=The ſtrength of (w) had cruſhed on every ſide the enemies of Rome. After his death they ſeemed to revive, and even to multiply.
(RQ:Macaulay Edinburgh Review)
Of a feeling, state of mind, etc.: to come back or return; to be reactivated or reawakened.
(RQ:Froissart Berners Cronycles) he ſaw the lord de la vale his hert reuyued and thought there was ſome tretye in hande.
(RQ:Tyndale NT) I was deed.
(RQ:Palsgrave Lesclarcissement) I take hert, ''Ie deuieus vif'', (..)
(RQ:Bunyan Pilgrim's Progress) and blaſphemies ſhall be forgiven unto men; be not faithleſs, but believing (quote-gloss); then did ''Chriſtian'' again a little revive, and ſtood up trembling; as at firſt, before ''Evangeliſt''.
(RQ:Cowper Poems)
(RQ:Scott Lord of the Isles)
(RQ:Shelley Revolt of Islam)
(RQ:Eliot Adam Bede)
(RQ:Galsworthy Man of Property)
(RQ:Woolf To the Lighthouse)
(RQ:Greene Captain and Enemy)
Of a metal (especially mercury) or other substance in a compound or mixture: to return to its pure or unmixed state.
Of a law or legal instrument: to be given new validity.
Of a musical, play, or other stage performance; also, a film or television programme: to have a new production put on.
(RQ:Tatler) in favour of dress and sound.
(synonym of) (“an act of reviving, or a state of being revived ''(in various senses)''”).
(RQ:Pepys Diary) Harris's going from Sir Davenant|W(quote-gloss)m Davenant's house, that he grew very proud and demanded £20 for himself extraordinary, more than Betterton|(quote-gloss) Betterton, or any body else, upon every new play, and £10 upon every revive; (..)|footer=Referring to a revival of a play. Harris was an English actor.
(inflection of)
(es-verb form of)