-
1 revive
1) (to come, or bring, back to consciousness, strength, health etc: They attempted to revive the woman who had fainted; She soon revived; The flowers revived in water; to revive someone's hopes.) priti/spraviti k sebi; oživeti, obuditi2) (to come or bring back to use etc: This old custom has recently (been) revived.) ponovno obuditi•- revival* * *[riváiv]transitive verbvrniti (koga) k zavesti; zopet oživiti, poživiti; zopet obuditi (čustvo, spomine); preporoditi; obnaviti, vzpostaviti, renovirati; juridically zopet uveljaviti; (zopet) osvežiti, vliti nov duh; ponovno uvesti (običaj itd.); theatre nanovo postaviti na oder (uprizoriti, igrati); chemistry avivirati; privesti v naravno stanjeto revive old feuds — zopet oživiti stare spore, staro sovraštvoto revive a reputation — vzpostaviti ugled, sloves; intransitive verb oživeti; priti zopet k sebi, zavedeti se; economy opomoči si; obnoviti se, obuditi se, zopet procvitati; zopet nastopiti; juridically priti, stopiti zopet v veljavopractice revives... — nastaja zopet praksa... -
2 of no avail
(of no use or effect: He tried to revive her but to no avail; His efforts were of no avail.) brez učinka -
3 to no avail
(of no use or effect: He tried to revive her but to no avail; His efforts were of no avail.) brez učinka
См. также в других словарях:
revive — re‧vive [rɪˈvaɪv] verb 1. [intransitive, transitive] if a company, the economy etc revives, or if something revives it, it becomes stronger or more active: • Some regions, such as the Northeast, will revive much more slowly than the national… … Financial and business terms
Revive — Re*vive , v. t. [Cf. F. reviver. See {Revive}, v. i.] 1. To restore, or bring again to life; to reanimate. [1913 Webster] Those bodies, by reason of whose mortality we died, shall be revived. Bp. Pearson. [1913 Webster] 2. To raise from coma,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
revive — re·vive /ri vīv/ vt re·vived, re·viv·ing: to restore the force, effect, or validity of (as a contract, will, action, or judgment) Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. revive … Law dictionary
Revive — may refer to:* Revive (Steadman album) * Revive (Bjørn Lynne album) *Revive (band), the Australian gospel band *Revival, bringing back to life … Wikipedia
Revive — Re*vive , v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Revived}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Reviving}.] [F. revivere, L. revivere; pref. re re + vivere to live. See {Vivid}.] 1. To return to life; to recover life or strength; to live anew; to become reanimated or reinvigorated.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
revive — (v.) early 15c., from M.Fr. revivre (10c.), from L. revivere to live again, from re again (see RE (Cf. re )) + vivere to live (see VITAL (Cf. vital)). Related: Revived; reviving … Etymology dictionary
revive — restore, revivify, resuscitate Analogous words: *recover, recruit, regain: recuperate, *improve, gain: refresh, rejuvenate, *renew … New Dictionary of Synonyms
revive — [v] start again; bring back to life animate, arouse, awaken, bounce back*, breathe new life into*, brighten, bring around*, bring to*, cheer, come around*, come to life, comfort, console, encourage, energize, enkindle, enliven, exhilarate,… … New thesaurus
revive — ► VERB 1) restore to or regain life, consciousness, or strength. 2) restore interest in or the popularity of. DERIVATIVES revivable adjective reviver noun. ORIGIN Latin revivere, from vivere live … English terms dictionary
revive — [ri vīv′] vi., vt. revived, reviving [ME reviven < OFr revivre < L revivere < re , again + vivere, to live: see BIO ] 1. to come or bring back to life or consciousness; resuscitate 2. to come or bring back to a healthy, vigorous, or… … English World dictionary
revive — verb 1 bring sth back ADVERB ▪ quickly ▪ Banks and businesses are quickly reviving business activities in China. ▪ recently VERB + REVIVE ▪ try to … Collocations dictionary