English to Hindi Dictionary revival

revival

पुनरुद्धार
definition
noun
a revival in the fortunes of the party
an improvement in the condition or strength of something.
translation of 'revival'
पुनः प्रवर्तन,
पुनरजीवन
noun
पुनस्र्ज्जीवन,
चेतना प्राप्ति,
पुनस्र्त्थान
example
This combined in the autumn of 1981 with a 'revival' in the fortunes of the Deutschmark.
Florence, meanwhile, is in the throes of a religious 'revival' led by the Dominican friar who thunders against vice, female luxuries, and male effeminacy.
Improvement requires a 'revival' of the basic features of the effective teacher training system which existed before the late 1960s.
cross-country skiing is enjoying a 'revival'
A subsequent 'revival' of religious practice led to a return to a more austere form of religion, which fed into political dissatisfaction with the colonial situation.
a 'revival' in the fortunes of the party
The Academy Building was built between 1872 and 1873 and is a later version of Gothic 'revival' .
So I went to a trendy lounge in my neighborhood on Friday night and decided to partake in the Pabst Blue Ribbon 'revival' .
A young student in 1984, he maintains Blue Star and the massacres after Indira Gandhi's assassination created a religious 'revival' among British Sikhs.
But a religious 'revival' also is taking place, and there are signs of development in Ho Chi Minh City.
Hendry's Reebok team-mate, Leam Richardson, has also played a major role in the 'revival' that has taken Blackpool to the edge of the play-off zone.
It was a revivalist movement, or at least it had the atmosphere of a religious 'revival' .
an economic 'revival'
The alligator shirts and wood-framed handbags are a pure fashion 'revival' , though, with little reference to the original subculture that spawned them.
Ironically, as the Savoy venture gets under way, it is the ENO which has unveiled a 'revival' of its production of one of the original Savoy Operas, The Mikado.
Last week, Philbin was tapped to host ABC's new 'revival' of ‘This is Your Life.’
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.
If he plays like that every time he is captain, we are in for a 'revival' of England football fortunes.
There is probably no more pertinent a time for a 'revival' of Shakespeare's story of the Trojan war than now.
A 'revival' of agricultural production in the Delaware and Chesapeake regions followed from increased plantings in the fall of 1780.
And, while it is no longer in its original location, Cotton Club has seen a jazz 'revival' with the renaissance of the Harlem neighborhood.
In other words, the 'revival' of religious millenarianism was a pre-patterned localised response to the social rifts and cultural crisis induced by French colonialism.
Even today, you still spend three days brain-dead before 'revival' .
And for those of us with long memories of mincing, saccharine productions, this 'revival' is an eye opener.
It's a sort of 'revival' of machine opera from the Baroque period.
Suchet leads an all-star cast in a 'revival' of Terence Rattigan's Man and Boy.
The Kurds, for example, are staging a cultural and linguistic 'revival' .
Just as the government was proclaiming a ‘jobs 'revival' ,’ the labour market was hit by another bombshell.
A new classical company, Concentric Circles, kicks off with a 'revival' of Racine's Phaedra.
The religious 'revival' in modern Islam is a reflection of the pace of social and technological change in the Muslim world, particularly the disruptive effects of a rapid increase in urbanization.
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