English to Spanish Dictionary revival

revival

renacimiento
definition
noun
a revival in the fortunes of the party
an improvement in the condition or strength of something.
translation of 'revival'
noun
resurgimiento,
resucitación,
despertamiento,
reanimación,
renacimiento,
reposición,
restablecimiento
example
Well-designed garden products are enjoying a popular 'revival' at the moment, giving the opportunity to side-step the boring plastic window box.
The 30-year-old, who is married to a Czech television newscaster, attributes his 'revival' to concentrating on improving his short game.
A 'revival' of economic strength is, in my view, the most urgent and realistic task.
By focusing on cost reduction and cash generation, Lord Hanson brought about a startling 'revival' in the fortunes of many companies that he acquired.
Florence, meanwhile, is in the throes of a religious 'revival' led by the Dominican friar who thunders against vice, female luxuries, and male effeminacy.
On the contrary, the whole vacuous production looks like a 'revival' perfunctorily thrown together by a hack house director.
the thunder and lightning affected his 'revival' in the third round
Yet it might provide the foundation for a 'revival' in Tory fortunes.
a 'revival' in the fortunes of the party
A young student in 1984, he maintains Blue Star and the massacres after Indira Gandhi's assassination created a religious 'revival' among British Sikhs.
a wave of religious 'revival'
After an hour of intense medical attention further 'revival' attempts failed and the children were pronounced dead just after 8pm.
The Consequences of Love, directed by Paolo Sorrentino, is meant to signal a 'revival' in the fortunes of Italian cinema.
Instead of a romantic 'revival' , they produce a parody of the original drama.
The variety has always seemed to have its origins in Bordeaux, where it has been enjoying a 'revival' in popularity.
Luther's power lay in these hymns of joy and strength and in his 'revival' of the doctrine of justification by the faith of the individual, implying religious liberty and attacking the scandal of indulgences.
It's a sort of 'revival' of machine opera from the Baroque period.
The alligator shirts and wood-framed handbags are a pure fashion 'revival' , though, with little reference to the original subculture that spawned them.
Suchet leads an all-star cast in a 'revival' of Terence Rattigan's Man and Boy.
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.
Even today, you still spend three days brain-dead before 'revival' .
On ‘Blues for the Lowlands’ Terry and McGhee show why they became so popular during the folk 'revival' of the 50s.
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.
A 'revival' of agricultural production in the Delaware and Chesapeake regions followed from increased plantings in the fall of 1780.
America's environmental 'revival' is a rich and complicated story with many specific exceptions, caveats and, of course, setbacks.
He said the performers were united in a common goal to create a memorable 'revival' of the production, after its long absence from the Bulgarian stage.
A new classical company, Concentric Circles, kicks off with a 'revival' of Racine's Phaedra.
an economic 'revival'
cryogenic 'revival' patients
Using rubber band tracks, which are currently enjoying a worldwide 'revival' of popularity, would reduce the vulnerability of wheeled vehicles.
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