reviving / rɪˈvaɪv /

振兴复兴复兴的振兴的

reviving2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb

re·vived, re·viv·ing.

  1. to activate, set in motion, or take up again; renew: to revive old feuds.
  2. to restore to life or consciousness: We revived him with artificial respiration.
  3. to put on or show again.
v. 无主动词 verb

re·vived, re·viv·ing.

  1. to return to life, consciousness, vigor, strength, or a flourishing condition.
  2. to recover from financial depression.
  3. to be quickened, restored, or renewed, as hope, confidence, suspicions, or memories.

reviving 近义词

v. 动词 verb

start again; bring back to life

更多reviving例句

  1. The vivid footage of the assault on the Capitol revived “horrible memories,” Daines said later.
  2. Another rare earths company may soon be going public in the US, presenting new opportunities for private investment in the domestic critical metals industry—a sector that Washington has signaled strong interest in reviving.
  3. EA Sports announced Tuesday that it is reviving its college football video game series, a beloved franchise that was discontinued in 2013 after EA and the NCAA were taken to court over the unpaid use of player likenesses.
  4. Experts hope this will revive ecosystems and safeguard the diversity of Earth’s species.
  5. Axios went as far as to name “reviving local journalism” as one of the 10 promises to readers that CEO Jim VandeHei made earlier this month in the company’s new Bill of Rights.
  6. Scholar-activists Larry Lessig and Zephyr Teachout have recently been working to revive it.
  7. Mamoon and his second wife, Liana, hope it will revive his reputation, and “prompt the reissuing of his books in forty languages.”
  8. A great chef who has fought to revive the old spirit says he fears history may repeat itself.
  9. My friends, hurting from a night of rum-infused revelry, opt for Revive.
  10. I ordered Revive and now I am about to close my second deal today!
  11. HE ordered a lunch which he thought the girl would like, with wine to revive the faculties that he knew must be failing.
  12. First Impressions are usually vivid but the power to revive them is weak—a poor memory.
  13. First Impressions are usually weak but the power to revive them is strong—still a poor memory.
  14. First Impressions on all subjects are strong and the power to revive them is strong—a first-class memory.
  15. Thus the facts help us devise the number phrase, and the phrase helps revive the facts.