English to Chinese Dictionary revival

revival

复兴
definition
noun
a revival in the fortunes of the party
an improvement in the condition or strength of something.
translation of 'revival'
noun
复活,
再起,
复兴
example
The 'revival' of the brilliant Caryl Churchill play Top Girls at the Aldwych is by and large not only a major event but also an evening to make alarm bells ring.
cryogenic 'revival' patients
Having lived through it once I am dismayed to see it again; this has to be the fifth 70s 'revival' I've endured.
And, while it is no longer in its original location, Cotton Club has seen a jazz 'revival' with the renaissance of the Harlem neighborhood.
During the trade mission, Ames and Dieleman visited farmers in northern Uganda where cotton production is undergoing a 'revival' .
Well-designed garden products are enjoying a popular 'revival' at the moment, giving the opportunity to side-step the boring plastic window box.
In contrast with the other southern cities in revolt, Toulon saw a 'revival' of religious activity under municipal auspices.
We had emerged from a very difficult drought and from a world recession in '83, thanks to the breaking of the drought here and the 'revival' of fortune in the rural industries.
She dispatched a naval task-force to the islands amidst a 'revival' of popular jingoism, and refused to allow mediation efforts to stand between her and a complete military victory.
But a religious 'revival' also is taking place, and there are signs of development in Ho Chi Minh City.
Hendry's Reebok team-mate, Leam Richardson, has also played a major role in the 'revival' that has taken Blackpool to the edge of the play-off zone.
a wave of religious 'revival'
On the contrary, the whole vacuous production looks like a 'revival' perfunctorily thrown together by a hack house director.
Boyana Film Studios, housed in a vast complex of buildings and situated in 30 hectares of parkland, has seen a dramatic 'revival' of its fortunes in recent years.
His novels enjoyed a brief popular 'revival' after the obscenity trial of Lady Chatterley's Lover in 1960, but most of them have fallen off the literary map.
a 'revival' in the fortunes of the party
Suchet leads an all-star cast in a 'revival' of Terence Rattigan's Man and Boy.
A subsequent 'revival' of religious practice led to a return to a more austere form of religion, which fed into political dissatisfaction with the colonial situation.
There is probably no more pertinent a time for a 'revival' of Shakespeare's story of the Trojan war than now.
an economic 'revival'
a 'revival' in the fortunes of the party
the thunder and lightning affected his 'revival' in the third round
a wave of religious 'revival'
Whether they will take a new production or a 'revival' to Lithuania is still undecided, but this, says Hill, is the advantage of an ensemble.
The variety has always seemed to have its origins in Bordeaux, where it has been enjoying a 'revival' in popularity.
During the postwar folk music 'revival' , rural musicians faced a similar mixture of adulation and condescension.
The International Coffee Organization provided funds to Angola for the 'revival' of its coffee production after a long civil war decimated production.
This combined in the autumn of 1981 with a 'revival' in the fortunes of the Deutschmark.
In the 1980s and 1990s, Afro-Peruvian music has witnessed a strong 'revival' and is now popular in the bars and dance halls of Lima.
It's a sort of 'revival' of machine opera from the Baroque period.
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