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单词 reanimate
释义

Definition of reanimate in English:

reanimate

verb riːˈanɪmeɪtriˈænəˌmeɪt
[with object]
  • 1Restore to life or consciousness; revive.

    使复活,使复苏,救活

    in the vain hope of being reanimated he left his body to science
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Of interest I also like to stretch the subgenre of zombies to cover films containing characters that are reanimated corpses.
    • In between lies a fascinating, disturbing account of life in early 19th century Europe, the stage across which the obsessive Frankenstein wanders in search of knowledge that will allow him to reanimate the dead.
    • The poem depicts the workings of an imminent deity that has the power to reanimate himself in every ‘face’ and take on the form of any human being, even the ‘dark skins His Father wrought.’
    • It did not pain me instead it revived, reanimated and retrieved me.
    • Scientists have created eerie zombie dogs, reanimating the canines after several hours of clinical death in attempts to develop suspended animation for humans.
    • For you see, Rosalie has psychic powers and the ability to reanimate the dead.
    • On this reading, the disciples at Emmaus did not meet a physically reanimated Jesus of Nazareth, but discovered that the simple things Jesus had taught them remained active and sustaining in their lives despite his brutal execution.
    • His solution was a sequel that would see the monster reanimated by an evil scientist.
    • They are zombies, butchered by overwork, and reanimated by the workshop staff, I bet, who are probably themselves controlled by some Terrible Black Magic Force!
    • My vision was blurry for a few moments and it was like I was trying to reanimate my body which for a few moments was also out.
    • Of course, we'll miss this character in any sequels, but there's a suggestion that the wizard might be able to reanimate him using the sacred stones.
    • It's no accident that it takes its structure from a film whose director was brought in to direct a single sequence in which a dead man is reanimated.
    • It isn't an airborne virus that's reanimating the corpses.
    • The Doc, our resident inventor, e-mails to say that his heart experiments are not going well, he has tried everything from a car ignition to 10,000 volts to reanimate an inert organ, but it is not responding.
    • They forge them, or steal them or plant false records or reanimate the dead, their papers anyway.
    • Madeline was a lush and a wine snob, a vegetarian, and a dreadful cook (once she had poached a thick hunk of cod to just that degree of lukewarmness that had reanimated the little white worms inside).
    • My client says they had both drunk too much, and afterwards he tried to reanimate the earl with mouth-to-moth resuscitation and a cardiac massage.
    • Never underestimate the metaphorical power of reanimated corpses.
    • Death and its hideous aftermath can come at the hands and blackened teeth of reanimated corpses or the deranged, power hungry gun muzzle of a fellow survivor.
    • First, these characters are not placid creatures risen by voodoo for slave labour but the dead, reanimated by a virus, whose single instinct is to eat human flesh.
    Synonyms
    revive, revitalize, renew, regenerate, restore, breathe new life into, make someone feel young again, revivify, resuscitate, refresh, reawaken, rekindle, put new life into, put new heart into, add some zest to, put some spark into, kick-start, uplift
    1. 1.1 Give fresh vigour or impetus to.
      使重有活力,使重振精神;鼓舞,激励
      his personal dislike of the man was reanimated

      他个人对这个人的厌恶感又被激起来了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • He describes the essay as an ‘eye-opener’ capable of reanimating the inherited rhetorical tradition of the Greeks and Romans.
      • A wielding of language that speaks as a means to recapture and reanimate male power, it suggests a masculinity reasserting itself at the expense of women.
      • Through text she reanimates the dreams of her concierge, a widow obsessed with the memory of her dead husband, though her husband remains dead.
      • Broaden or reanimate the repertoire, one argument runs, and you will broaden and reanimate the box office too.
      • Ulmer reanimates the now ossified mantra that ‘the personal is political’ by providing it with a methodology.
      • The ability of that medium to distort, graft, reopen and reanimate lost time permits these poems their exquisite, darkly funny dissections.
      • You can't get two Democrats together these days without a debate breaking out over what needs to be done to rescue, resuscitate, reanimate, remake, rebrand and redeem the Democratic Party.
      • Before we can even be in a position to make such a choice the democratic model of self-defense will have to be reanimated.
      • Mozart had obtained by force the words that suited him; his music reanimated the mystery of the mythic theme with a prodigious power of invention.
      • Ports, harbours and dockyards reanimated the scams of Pepys's day.
      • Only a free market would restore abundance, not to mention reanimating foreign trade, which had languished under a controlled economy.
      • But he is indeed, as the title suggests, ‘bound to fail’ for in reanimating these moments he empowers both his foes.
      • Alongside the need for patriotic resistance, the preoccupations of contemporary politics are calculated to reanimate Tory instincts.
      • So we decided to put it all back together - to reconnect and restore our wounded world until it was reanimated and resilient again.
      • Eisner has expressed interest in reanimating Disney's classic 2 - D features in 3 - D.
      • Anyway, in the first keynote political speech of the year, she's reanimated the old bogeyman argument that earth's oil supply is about to run out.
      • Whether he is writing about the Renaissance necromancer John Dee or the religious visions of Thomas More, Ackroyd energetically reanimates his historical personages, and insists their spectres are still tangible here and now.

Derivatives

  • reanimation

  • noun riːanɪˈmeɪʃ(ə)nˌriˌænəˈmeɪʃ(ə)n
    • The patient is then transferred to reanimation and stays there until the first myocardial biopsy.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Patients with significant sequelae should be referred for multidisciplinary management that could include injections of botulinum toxin, facial reanimation, and cosmetic surgery.
      • The management of the eye in facial paralysis requires careful consideration of the paralysed lower lid in addition to reanimation of the upper lid.
      • One such ritual involved the reanimation of dead souls.
      • Passed from the realm of the living, it resides in a cultural graveyard of tropes subject to periodic reanimation.

Definition of reanimate in US English:

reanimate

verbrēˈanəˌmātriˈænəˌmeɪt
[with object]
  • 1Restore to life or consciousness; revive.

    使复活,使复苏,救活

    Example sentencesExamples
    • On this reading, the disciples at Emmaus did not meet a physically reanimated Jesus of Nazareth, but discovered that the simple things Jesus had taught them remained active and sustaining in their lives despite his brutal execution.
    • They forge them, or steal them or plant false records or reanimate the dead, their papers anyway.
    • They are zombies, butchered by overwork, and reanimated by the workshop staff, I bet, who are probably themselves controlled by some Terrible Black Magic Force!
    • Of interest I also like to stretch the subgenre of zombies to cover films containing characters that are reanimated corpses.
    • It's no accident that it takes its structure from a film whose director was brought in to direct a single sequence in which a dead man is reanimated.
    • Of course, we'll miss this character in any sequels, but there's a suggestion that the wizard might be able to reanimate him using the sacred stones.
    • Never underestimate the metaphorical power of reanimated corpses.
    • Scientists have created eerie zombie dogs, reanimating the canines after several hours of clinical death in attempts to develop suspended animation for humans.
    • The poem depicts the workings of an imminent deity that has the power to reanimate himself in every ‘face’ and take on the form of any human being, even the ‘dark skins His Father wrought.’
    • Death and its hideous aftermath can come at the hands and blackened teeth of reanimated corpses or the deranged, power hungry gun muzzle of a fellow survivor.
    • First, these characters are not placid creatures risen by voodoo for slave labour but the dead, reanimated by a virus, whose single instinct is to eat human flesh.
    • The Doc, our resident inventor, e-mails to say that his heart experiments are not going well, he has tried everything from a car ignition to 10,000 volts to reanimate an inert organ, but it is not responding.
    • Madeline was a lush and a wine snob, a vegetarian, and a dreadful cook (once she had poached a thick hunk of cod to just that degree of lukewarmness that had reanimated the little white worms inside).
    • In between lies a fascinating, disturbing account of life in early 19th century Europe, the stage across which the obsessive Frankenstein wanders in search of knowledge that will allow him to reanimate the dead.
    • My client says they had both drunk too much, and afterwards he tried to reanimate the earl with mouth-to-moth resuscitation and a cardiac massage.
    • His solution was a sequel that would see the monster reanimated by an evil scientist.
    • For you see, Rosalie has psychic powers and the ability to reanimate the dead.
    • It isn't an airborne virus that's reanimating the corpses.
    • My vision was blurry for a few moments and it was like I was trying to reanimate my body which for a few moments was also out.
    • It did not pain me instead it revived, reanimated and retrieved me.
    Synonyms
    revive, revitalize, renew, regenerate, restore, breathe new life into, make someone feel young again, revivify, resuscitate, refresh, reawaken, rekindle, put new life into, put new heart into, add some zest to, put some spark into, kick-start, uplift
    1. 1.1 Give fresh vigor or impetus to.
      使重有活力,使重振精神;鼓舞,激励
      his personal dislike of the man was reanimated

      他个人对这个人的厌恶感又被激起来了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Ports, harbours and dockyards reanimated the scams of Pepys's day.
      • Mozart had obtained by force the words that suited him; his music reanimated the mystery of the mythic theme with a prodigious power of invention.
      • So we decided to put it all back together - to reconnect and restore our wounded world until it was reanimated and resilient again.
      • A wielding of language that speaks as a means to recapture and reanimate male power, it suggests a masculinity reasserting itself at the expense of women.
      • He describes the essay as an ‘eye-opener’ capable of reanimating the inherited rhetorical tradition of the Greeks and Romans.
      • Eisner has expressed interest in reanimating Disney's classic 2 - D features in 3 - D.
      • Alongside the need for patriotic resistance, the preoccupations of contemporary politics are calculated to reanimate Tory instincts.
      • But he is indeed, as the title suggests, ‘bound to fail’ for in reanimating these moments he empowers both his foes.
      • Through text she reanimates the dreams of her concierge, a widow obsessed with the memory of her dead husband, though her husband remains dead.
      • You can't get two Democrats together these days without a debate breaking out over what needs to be done to rescue, resuscitate, reanimate, remake, rebrand and redeem the Democratic Party.
      • Ulmer reanimates the now ossified mantra that ‘the personal is political’ by providing it with a methodology.
      • Only a free market would restore abundance, not to mention reanimating foreign trade, which had languished under a controlled economy.
      • Whether he is writing about the Renaissance necromancer John Dee or the religious visions of Thomas More, Ackroyd energetically reanimates his historical personages, and insists their spectres are still tangible here and now.
      • Anyway, in the first keynote political speech of the year, she's reanimated the old bogeyman argument that earth's oil supply is about to run out.
      • Broaden or reanimate the repertoire, one argument runs, and you will broaden and reanimate the box office too.
      • Before we can even be in a position to make such a choice the democratic model of self-defense will have to be reanimated.
      • The ability of that medium to distort, graft, reopen and reanimate lost time permits these poems their exquisite, darkly funny dissections.
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