revitalise vt. 使有新的活力, 使新生, 使恢复元气
revitalise[ verb ]give new life or vigor to<verb.change> revitalize
- They reason that if savings could be mobilised, they would provide investment funds and help to revitalise industries.
- TWO months into independence, Slovakia is looking for foreign capital to revitalise one of the most distorted economies in the region. It is not an easy task.
- Not for nothing did AT&T move out of its pompous Philip Johnson-designed Manhattan skyscraper when it was forced to revitalise itself.
- It had also sold its library to Mr Ted Turner, the CNN television mogul, although the company had held on to the UA library of 1,500 films. Mr Mancuso's first objective was to assemble a new team to revitalise MGM and to resuscitate UA.
- UK figures have not yet been broken out separately but they will undoubtedly be dismal. Mr Temple's head will equally undoubtedly be on the block if his efforts to revitalise the company fail.
- The government promised radical market reforms to revitalise an economy weighed down by extensive welfare provisions. But it was hit by the worst recession since the 1930s which shrank the economy by 5 per cent over three years.
- Prior to their Olympic return, the pair had been in the twilight of their career but winning will almost certainly revitalise it.
- Guarana, sold in powder or capsule form, is made from a 'sustainably cultivated' Amazonian berry, and is guaranteed to revitalise flagging delegates over the next 72 hours of meetings.
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