释义 |
reanimation|ˌriːænɪˈmeɪʃən| [f. prec.: see -ation.] 1. a. The action of restoring to life. Also fig.
1797Encycl. Brit. (ed. 3) XVI. 26/1 Reanimation means the reviving or restoring to life those who are apparently dead. 1858Sears Athan. ii. xi. 237 The reanimation of the corpse. 1889Ruskin Præterita III. 147 The first two of his great poems..are the re-animation of Border legends. b. The fact, or process, of returning to life.
1816W. Taylor in Monthly Mag. XLI. 502 Canonized on the express ground of a miraculous reanimation. 1838Poe A. G. Pym Wks. 1864 IV. 31, I experienced..a giddy and overpowering sense of deliverance and reanimation. 2. Renewal of vigour or liveliness.
1815Jane Austen Emma ii. v, A most delightful re⁓animation of exhausted spirits. 1833Sir F. B. Head Bubbles fr. Brunnen 4, I felt a reanimation of mind. |