| Information | |
|---|---|
| has gloss | (noun) bringing again into activity and prominence; "the revival of trade"; "a revival of a neglected play by Moliere"; "the Gothic revival in architecture" resurgence, revival, revitalization, revitalisation, revivification | 
| has gloss | eng: In fiction a revival is an attempt to revive or revitalize a defunct media franchise by producing new, original story lines. For example a television program which was once cancelled and may be revived at a later date with new episodes created for broadcast. | 
| lexicalization | eng: resurgence | 
| lexicalization | eng: revitalisation | 
| lexicalization | eng: revitalization | 
| lexicalization | eng: revival | 
| lexicalization | eng: revivification | 
| subclass of | (noun) a change for the better; progress in development betterment, advance, improvement | 
| has subclass | (noun) the revival of learning and culture Renascence, rebirth, Renaissance | 
| has subclass | (noun) the activity of spiritual or physical renewal regeneration | 
| has subclass | (noun) a revival from inactivity and disuse; "it produced a resurrection of hope" resurrection | 
| has subclass | (noun) the act of reviving a person and returning them to consciousness; "although he was apparently drowned, resuscitation was accomplished by artificial respiration" resuscitation | 
| has subclass | c/Christian revivals | 
| has subclass | e/National revivals | 
| Links | |
|---|---|
| Show unreliable ▼ | |
| similar | e/Revival (television) | 
Lexvo © 2008-2025 Gerard de Melo. Contact Legal Information / Imprint