Revive vs. Vitality — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Revive and Vitality
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Compare with Definitions
Revive
To bring back to life or consciousness; resuscitate
Revived the passenger who fainted.
Vitality
Vitality (from Middle French vitalité, from Latin vītālitās, from Latin vīta 'life') is the capacity to live, grow, or develop. More simply it is the property of having life.
Revive
To give new health, strength, or spirit to
Was revived by the long shower.
A speech that revived morale.
Vitality
The state of being strong and active; energy
Changes that will give renewed vitality to our democracy
Revive
To restore to use, currency, activity, or notice
Revived a fad from the 1980s.
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Vitality
The capacity to live, grow, or develop
Plants that lost their vitality when badly pruned.
Revive
To present (an old play, for example) again.
Vitality
The characteristic, principle, or force that distinguishes living things from nonliving things.
Revive
To renew in the mind; recall
An experience that revived a bad memory.
Vitality
Physical or intellectual vigor; energy or liveliness.
Revive
To return to life or consciousness
The patient revived after the anesthetic wore off.
Vitality
The capacity to endure
The vitality of an old tradition.
Revive
To regain health, vigor, or good spirits
We only revived after the heat wave broke.
Vitality
The capacity to live and develop.
Revive
To return to use, currency, activity, or notice
His interest in sculpture revived late in life.
Vitality
Energy or vigour.
Revive
(intransitive) To return to life; to become reanimated or reinvigorated.
Vitality
That which distinguishes living from nonliving things; life, animateness.
Revive
(transitive) To return to life; to cause to recover life or strength; to cause to live anew, or to prevent from dying.
The dying puppy was revived by a soft hand.
Her grandmother refused to be revived if she lost consciousness.
Vitality
The quality or state of being vital; the principle of life; vital force; animation; as, the vitality of eggs or vegetable seeds; the vitality of an enterprise.
Revive
(ambitransitive) To recover from a state of oblivion, obscurity, neglect, or depression.
Classical learning revived in the fifteenth century.
The Manx language has been revived after dying out and is now taught in some schools on the Isle of Man.
Vitality
An energetic style
Revive
To restore, or bring again to life; to reanimate; to make lively again.
This new paint job should revive the surgery waiting room.
Vitality
A healthy capacity for vigorous activity;
Jogging works off my excess energy
He seemed full of vim and vigor
Revive
(transitive) To raise from coma, languor, depression, or discouragement; to bring into action after a suspension.
Vitality
(biology) a hypothetical force (not physical or chemical) once thought by Henri Bergson to cause the evolution and development of organisms
Revive
(transitive) To renew in the mind or memory; to bring to recollection; to recall attention to; to reawaken.
The Harry Potter films revived the world's interest in wizardry
Vitality
The property of being able to survive and grow;
The vitality of a seed
Revive
(intransitive) To recover its natural or metallic state (e.g. a metal)
Revive
(transitive) To restore or reduce to its natural or metallic state
To revive a metal after calcination
Revive
To return to life; to recover life or strength; to live anew; to become reanimated or reinvigorated.
The Lord heard the voice of Elijah; and the soul of the child came into again, and he revived.
Revive
Hence, to recover from a state of oblivion, obscurity, neglect, or depression; as, classical learning revived in the fifteenth century.
Revive
To recover its natural or metallic state, as a metal.
Revive
To restore, or bring again to life; to reanimate.
Those bodies, by reason of whose mortality we died, shall be revived.
Revive
To raise from coma, languor, depression, or discouragement; to bring into action after a suspension.
Those gracious words revive my drooping thoughts.
Your coming, friends, revives me.
Revive
Hence, to recover from a state of neglect or disuse; as, to revive letters or learning.
Revive
To renew in the mind or memory; to bring to recollection; to recall attention to; to reawaken.
The mind has a power in many cases to revive perceptions which it has once had.
Revive
To restore or reduce to its natural or metallic state; as, to revive a metal after calcination.
Revive
Cause to regain consciousness;
The doctors revived the comatose man
Revive
Give new life or energy to;
A hot soup will revive me
This will renovate my spirits
This treatment repaired my health
Revive
Be brought back to life, consciousness, or strength;
Interest in ESP revived
Revive
Restore from a depressed, inactive, or unused state;
He revived this style of opera
He resurrected the tango in this remote part of Argentina
Revive
Return to consciousness;
The patient came to quickly
She revived after the doctor gave her an injection
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