Revival in a sentence as a noun

If google would be so kind as to state what their problem is with it, who knows, it might see a revival.

I would really like to see a revival of the path to lifestyle businesses. It's kind of bizarre that it's nearly impossible to start one without putting your entire life at risk.

Both are going through a great revival. There are a lot of reasons why, but it really has nothing to do with machine politics, ivy league educated people, or anything else you mentioned.

Party which hates the fact that the leader of Turkey is a practising Muslim and that Islam is seeing a revival in Turkey. So try to read between the lines and see that theres more to the story than trees.

After fifty years of trending down at an accelerating rate I've been arguing for several years no one in the press was seeing the story of the city's revival. Yet there are critics snarking that the entire city isn't back yet.

This is not to say that this means Flickr will survive against Facebook, anymore than quality point and shoot pocket cameras have a chance of revival in our camera phone era. But Flickr, for now, definitely has the edge in quality and variety of photos.

Production is changing but there will be a revival of organization, education and then agitation. What happened before in history will happen again.

I'd really like if we could bring about a revival in manufacturing engineering in the US. Other than the ecosystem effect, the main way that China has an advantage is labor cost, so I propose that we could build up a "Shenzhen of America" in the San Diego / Tijuana free trade zone. The repetitive work that takes a lot of hours would be done on the Mexico side, where labor is now almost as cheap as China.

Maybe since it's caused a bit of a revival in interest in Gille, someone will re-print an English translation, or a good secondary work. Oddly his only work that is widely available in English, Engineers of the Renaissance, is quite good but has none of this in it; it's just a straightforward, well-researched history of Renaissance-era engineering.

Here it is: In studying a philosopher, the right attitude is neither reverence nor contempt, but first a kind of hypothetical sympathy, until it is possible to know what it feels like to believe in his theories, and only then a revival of the critical attitude, which should resemble, as far as possible, the state of mind of a person abandoning opinions which he hitherto held. Contempt interferes with the first part of this process, and reverence with the second.

Hey guys This seems like it would be perfect stuff for an educational lightning talk If any of you are in the SF Bay Area, please consider doing a ~5 min presentation on your lisp-in-x implementation at the lisp meetup "revival" this saturday at the blackbox mansion in Atherton ... free beer...

Then they probably had to make a key decision between keeping an emergency team busy for 90 minutes for every case where death was probable, just in case there's that less-than-1% chance of revival, or dismissing the team and freeing the resources for patients who have a higher probability of survival, and increasing the probability of survival of those due to faster response times.

I would love to see the tech culture in Ireland experience a revival, we were once the worlds largest exporter of software second only to Japan and our CS Graduates were some of the most sought after candidates on the planet but for those of you considering a move, remember, whilst he timing may be right from a business perspective, the atmosphere and culture is a huge barrier to overcome.

Revival definitions

noun

bringing again into activity and prominence; "the revival of trade"; "a revival of a neglected play by Moliere"; "the Gothic revival in architecture"

See also: resurgence revitalization revitalisation revivification

noun

an evangelistic meeting intended to reawaken interest in religion