The group began the revival of the Romanian language and culture, and wanted to again unite the Moldavian Republic with Romania. |
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The current revival of interest in the Tobin tax is the result of events of the last few years. |
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The Carolingians attempted to put together a sort of western revival of the Empire. |
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Moorish details blended easily with elements of other European revival styles, including Venetian and Byzantine architecture. |
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And the revival in share prices has prompted many an investor to declare the bear market is finally over. |
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By then it had taken on some of the characteristics of the evangelical revival and shed its lukewarm latitudinarianism. |
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The revival of Confucius mirrors the return of other traditional belief systems and religions such as Taoism and Buddhism. |
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Only recently has there been a revival of Cham national pride, spurred on by governmental promises of ethnic freedom. |
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This appellation is undergoing much-needed revival but old vintages suggest that the potential for long-lived, concentrated reds is there. |
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Many rococo revival etageres were made from imported rosewood because the beautiful grain patterns followed the lines of carved decoration. |
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The revival version, then, is the only one told from the point of view of a third-person narrator who witnesses the meeting of the protagonists. |
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Now she is making a welcome return to the boards in a revival of The Solid Gold Cadillac. |
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After an hour of intense medical attention further revival attempts failed and the children were pronounced dead just after 8pm. |
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A revival of theriomorphic figures could also be accomplished by turning to those of the remote past. |
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One typically Tuscan form of revival with roots in the renaissance was the cloister lunette fresco cycle. |
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Yet a superficial revival of radical pamphleteering hides what is really going on. |
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Specifically, the Board urges a revival of the oversight role of metropolitans, i.e., archbishops overseeing bishops in their province. |
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What was more shocking, however, was the fakeness of it all, like a 1980s revival show but with even worse tunes. |
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She dressed the part and designed furnishings for the family castles in a romantic, Byzantine revival style. |
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There is probably no more pertinent a time for a revival of Shakespeare's story of the Trojan war than now. |
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But her recent career revival has proved that she has always been a woman of many facets and hidden depths. |
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Hindrances to revival were sloth, unbelief, lack of discipline and a spirit of controversy. |
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Its revival during the last decade has led to the opening of choir schools to teach the younger generation their heritage of sacred vocal music. |
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During this war the revival of traditional values was a vital part of the morale boosting needed to tackle such an obviously evil enemy. |
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The possibility for innovation and the revival of an acclaimed artistic powerhouse is going to be highly attractive. |
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The time is ripe over here for a revival of the song the British Tommies liked to sing on the way to the trenches. |
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Well-designed garden products are enjoying a popular revival at the moment, giving the opportunity to side-step the boring plastic window box. |
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Despite his alleged unmusicality, there is no doubt that William Morris inspired and encouraged this revival of early-musical-instrument making. |
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And for those of us with long memories of mincing, saccharine productions, this revival is an eye opener. |
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There are those among us who will go anywhere to hear a revival of a musical. |
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Despite a brief revival during the British civil wars, the reivers had disappeared by the end of the 17th century. |
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Methodism and Salvationism were born in revival, a revival concerned with saving sinners and making saints out of converts. |
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This small oratory was ornamented in an extraordinary way by Sister Lynch in the Celtic revival style. |
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A tremendous amount of effort is being made to equate the Lake District and surrounds with the revival of regional foods. |
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By a fortunate coincidence, the interest in algebraic structures related to substructural logics is also undergoing a revival among algebraists. |
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They participated in their own early-1990s-style revival by sporting loudly colored pants. |
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A revival of domestic do-it-yourselfing and artsy crafting is driving a cultural boom in all things knitted, hand-sewn, superglued and welded. |
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But a religious revival also is taking place, and there are signs of development in Ho Chi Minh City. |
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A cultural revival in the eighteenth century was reinforced by the spread of Nonconformity, which became an integral part of Welsh identity. |
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We can have revival the same way as our brothers and sisters in Christ, won theirs! |
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Unlike in Central Europe, scholars unschooled in legal theory have dominated the Schmitt revival in North America. |
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In contrast with the other southern cities in revolt, Toulon saw a revival of religious activity under municipal auspices. |
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The immediate effect would be to create the conditions for a revival of socialism, trade unionism and so on in the mainstream. |
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A new classical company, Concentric Circles, kicks off with a revival of Racine's Phaedra. |
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Among these were marijuana, a revival of cocaine sniffing, and experimentation with lysergic acid diethylamide, a powerful hallucinogen. |
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Could this sleeping giant, if awakened, play a role in the revival of labor unions and progressive politics? |
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The post-Soviet era has witnessed a revival of religious practice and the introduction of a large number of new religious movements. |
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In the 1950s, lagerphones suddenly appeared all over the country, becoming the signature of the revival bush bands. |
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Many scholars have, in fact, described New Age ideas as a revival of esoteric and mystical religion traditions rooted in humanity's ancient past. |
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Carrot cakes have enjoyed a revival in Britain in the last quarter of the 20th century. |
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This sea change in music distribution is already upon us, and could provide the tonic for the revival of those beleaguered music companies. |
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The influence of the Dissenting churches, and the spiritual revival of Methodism, gradually led Welsh society away from Anglicanism. |
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The great strength of the revival of the movement, and of the left within the movement, has been the desire for unity. |
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If he plays like that every time he is captain, we are in for a revival of England football fortunes. |
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Whether they will take a new production or a revival to Lithuania is still undecided, but this, says Hill, is the advantage of an ensemble. |
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In the last few years, we had a revival of 60s and 70s fashion, with turtlenecks, bell-bottoms and jeans cut to fray dominating the landscape. |
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After all, little is widely known about the Manx revival of the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century in general. |
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One of the film's funniest jokes is a running gag involving a car radio stuck on a 1980s soft rock revival station. |
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The revival helped to create an image of a pastoral, mythic, unmodernized Ireland that influenced subsequent writers and artists. |
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Suchet leads an all-star cast in a revival of Terence Rattigan's Man and Boy. |
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In the 1980s and 1990s, Afro-Peruvian music has witnessed a strong revival and is now popular in the bars and dance halls of Lima. |
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Using rubber band tracks, which are currently enjoying a worldwide revival of popularity, would reduce the vulnerability of wheeled vehicles. |
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As he travelled across the land evangelizing at revival meetings he took the lads with him. |
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The revival of the house of Burberry is having an impact too as checks and colourful tartans abound on trousers and skirts. |
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There's an unspoken rule that when one reviews a revival of an older or canonic work you're not allowed to comment on the original text. |
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The main reason for this is that the obverse side of the U.S. manufacturing revival was a manufacturing crisis in Japan and western Europe. |
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The fear is that corporate profits have been boosted by cost cutting, not increased sales and prices from a revival of the economy. |
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As the Olympic Games return to the land of their birth, a revival of the ancient Greeks' other brainchildren seems to be at hand as well. |
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The first treasure the society fought to preserve was the monumental arch at Euston station, a supreme example of Greek revival architecture. |
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A conference to shape the revival of the region's rural areas will be held at York Racecourse this month. |
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At the beginning of the 18th century only ten per cent of the people were literate in Wales, but revival brought change. |
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She longed to see a powerful revival among the neglected and helpless widows of India. |
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The Consequences of Love, directed by Paolo Sorrentino, is meant to signal a revival in the fortunes of Italian cinema. |
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She is overawed by the extent of the old-style dance revival and says she has had to put on extra classes to cope with demand. |
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Now and again, his voice lifts like a hillbilly choir or a candlelit revival presided over by David Crosby. |
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A revival of economic strength is, in my view, the most urgent and realistic task. |
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Our aim is not the revival of social democratic reformism, but rather the socialist reorganization of society. |
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For his lieutenants, his homecoming signals the revival of the right-wing movement in South Africa. |
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This combined in the autumn of 1981 with a revival in the fortunes of the Deutschmark. |
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Marbling, like papermaking and hand-made books, has recently experienced a revival of interest among artists and craftspersons. |
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There has been a revival of respect for patois as a symbol of cultural pride among St. Lucians. |
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Financing would come, most obviously, from the revival of steeply progressive taxation. |
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Although the cast feet and applied rim ornament are in an ornate rococo revival style, the details are not chased. |
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Many believe that revival comes through slick advertisements and extensive planning. |
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His blasting powders and fuses were also instrumental in the revival of the hand grenade shortly after his death. |
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The people of this village did not favor the revival and had already made clear their policy of noninvolvement. |
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The variety has always seemed to have its origins in Bordeaux, where it has been enjoying a revival in popularity. |
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I think Cameron could be at the forefront of something of a revival for us northerly types. |
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Regional variants to the vernacular revival style took account of local materials and building traditions. |
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The culture appears to be undergoing some kind of revival among those who like to express their individuality by dressing alike. |
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Its revival of The Mystery of Irma Vep was also a success and will be remounted at Edmonton's Citadel Theatre next season. |
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Johnson was a banner figure for artists of the great 1960s revival in black culture. |
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On the contrary, the whole vacuous production looks like a revival perfunctorily thrown together by a hack house director. |
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In addition, the Sikh Sabha movement produced a revival in Sikh culture, language, and literature. |
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True, wrestling has changed over the years, but maybe we'll see a revival of kayfabe. |
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The architect Ralph Adams Cram was such a fan of the Gothic revival that he became an Anglo-Catholic. |
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The idea that quotas on China's imports will spark a revival in US undergarment manufacturing is misplaced. |
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The prog rock revival gathered pace last year when they toured Europe, South America and South East Asia. |
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In the West, Presbyterians, Methodists, and Baptists employed revival meetings to evangelize unchurched frontier families. |
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The scene is usually uninhabited but spinning wheels, Windsor chairs, rag rugs, and other icons of the colonial revival suggest a human presence. |
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They have relapsed back into their old ways, the revival already forgotten. |
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The 30-year-old, who is married to a Czech television newscaster, attributes his revival to concentrating on improving his short game. |
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And, while it is no longer in its original location, Cotton Club has seen a jazz revival with the renaissance of the Harlem neighborhood. |
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America's environmental revival is a rich and complicated story with many specific exceptions, caveats and, of course, setbacks. |
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His revival continued after the restart with another brace of tries. |
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He said the performers were united in a common goal to create a memorable revival of the production, after its long absence from the Bulgarian stage. |
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David Corballis's production was a sterling revival of a classic comedy. |
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Even more fatal was the revival of radical political activism in the army. |
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Down and out as a beaten finalist in Paris four years ago, Ronaldo's revival as the world's most deadly striker was sealed by two second half strikes. |
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This coming week, a revival of the play goes into previews, with Bradley Cooper in the starring role. |
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The revival swept in glam costumes, elegant choreography, and cheeky fun, sometimes weaving in social commentary. |
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It was a sold-out all-ages show, and the mainroom floor was swarming with post-pop kids who were amped up on the prospect of the umpteenth revival of raw rock 'n' roll. |
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After leaving Biba in 1976, she became a well-known interior and exterior designer in the revival of the Miami art deco District. |
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Arles, once the capital of Roman Gaul, declined after the barbarian invasions and experienced a political and economic revival in the 12 th century. |
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The International Coffee Organization provided funds to Angola for the revival of its coffee production after a long civil war decimated production. |
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Ultimately, the current Tex-Mex revival is too specific, too local, and too personal to change the way America eats. |
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It is tempting to say that the feudal-dynastic element had been removed from foreign policy, but there was to be a significant revival of dynastic policy under the Stewarts. |
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The more I become dissipated, ill, a broken pitcher, the more I too become a creative artist in that great revival of art. |
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In the third episode, Hart and Cohle visit a tent revival in Cajun country. |
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Praveen Garg, district collector of Khandwa, after visiting the area announced that district administration would undertake the revival initiatives. |
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The late nineteenth century now seems as much all age of aristocrats and peasants, of religious revival and renascent monarchies as one of capitalists and imperialists. |
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The Leonine revival featured not only the harnessing of Thomas' thought to confront modernism, but as a necessary preparation, the modern editing of his sizeable corpus. |
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The revival was halted when they were dealt another two-pronged setback. |
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Historically, so far as I can understand, periods of spiritual quickening and revival have gone in hand with God's people coming together to pray. |
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By the last quarter of the nineteenth century Viennese watchmakers were replicating earlier watch forms as well as continuing the revival of Renaissance enameling techniques. |
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The evangelical revival made sabbatarianism fashionable, so that on a Victorian Sunday there was no sport or pleasure, not even reading of serious secular literature. |
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This was in part due to the influence of Tractarianism and the support which its leading figures, especially Edward Bouverie Pusey, gave to the revival of conventual life. |
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At the same time, there has been a revival of interest in the ancient methods of calculation, especially the use of simple and unsophisticated gadgets such as the abacus. |
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And at the end of the book she envisions a return to that purity, either through the destruction of humanity by androcracy, or a revival of gylany. |
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The garage rock revival has gotten so much press the last year that critics have had to invent the term New Garage to keep track of bands like The Strokes and Yeah Yeah Yeahs. |
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The Jermyn Street Theatre is yet another much needed space for the revival of those gems of the musical theatre that are too small for anything like the major West End houses. |
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In a tribute he said that Mr Patten was a very popular and committed member of the group of people who had dedicated themselves to the revival of the yawl. |
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The Internet gives video on demand the kind of universal reach that revival houses could scarcely dream of. |
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Bringing Them Back to Life Carl Zimmer, National Geographic The revival of an extinct species is no longer a fantasy. |
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Natural deterrents against sea erosion have been depleted to such extents that their revival cannot be considered a viable plan to counter sea disasters. |
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In the latter part of the 20th century the male alto voice became closely associated with the revival of Baroque opera, especially the works of Handel. |
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By 2010, Hunter was directing a well received revival of Henrik Ibsen's Ghosts at Access Theatre on Broadway. |
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Exactly 100 years ago this week, Wales was in the midst of a fervent religious revival led by a young Methodist, stoking fanatical excitement and emotional excesses. |
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Gassendi, for example, embarked on a wholehearted revival and modification of Epicurean atomism, which had a considerable impact on natural philosophy. |
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It would destroy any tentative revival of confidence and spending. |
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Secondly, Trinitarian thought has enjoyed a revival of late precisely because theologians have shown its relevance to contemporary social concerns. |
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The deal underscores a solid revival in the mergers and acquisitions market after the fallow years that followed the collapse of the technology boom. |
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The Restoration did not bring the looked-for revival of Crowe's fortunes. |
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As a consequence, there was a revival of the Sumerian language, but only in religious and literary areas, as the language remained unimportant for administrative purposes. |
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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. |
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In the 1990s there was a cultural revival among the Khmer in the northeast that included the formation of dance and music groups to promote Khmer culture. |
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Ultimately, this new centralism strengthened the authority of the Church, while the revival of popular forms of religious practice further increased its appeal. |
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We had emerged from a very difficult drought and from a world recession in '83, thanks to the breaking of the drought here and the revival of fortune in the rural industries. |
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The Celtic revival in the world of arts and crafts meant an abundance of round towers, shamrocks and wolfhounds, all of which graced the postcards. |
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It frequently happens that God, prior to doing a great work of revival and renewal among a community of his people, raises up forerunners and heralds of the work. |
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The emergence of the Greek revival style is evidenced by the rear piazza, which was supported by four Roman Doric columns, each hewn from a solid log. |
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Praise to you for offering us your refreshment and revival day after day! |
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Much of the work which transformed the old Frankish Church into the expanding Church of the Carolingian revival was done by English men and women. |
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By focusing on cost reduction and cash generation, Lord Hanson brought about a startling revival in the fortunes of many companies that he acquired. |
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The revival of St Emilion first occurred in the 1930s with the demolition of geographical boundaries and recognition of Pomerol as an independent appellation. |
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Boyana Film Studios, housed in a vast complex of buildings and situated in 30 hectares of parkland, has seen a dramatic revival of its fortunes in recent years. |
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At this time, the Palladian style was enjoying something of a revival and Ware extended the suite of rooms with a reverential nod towards the original designer. |
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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. |
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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. |
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Many dinners were hosted and attended by well-known left-wingers, and the stage was set for the revival of Whiggery on the British political landscape. |
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A young student in 1984, he maintains Blue Star and the massacres after Indira Gandhi's assassination created a religious revival among British Sikhs. |
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Florence, meanwhile, is in the throes of a religious revival led by the Dominican friar who thunders against vice, female luxuries, and male effeminacy. |
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Ashtarte Productions produce a breathtaking revival of this tragic play. |
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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. |
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The late 1970s brought a revival of historicism, often resulting in a reaction against Modern Movement design principles and technology in design. |
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Chris Cusiter proved he can hack it on the big stage and the late revival showed that the men in the thistle jerseys at least have pride in their professionalism. |
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The Pope could be seen sporting the traditional Papal Winter wear with, in addition, the revival of the little hood on the ermine-trimmed red mozetta. |
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It's a sort of revival of machine opera from the Baroque period. |
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When ENB brought its new revival of this production to the Coliseum, it laudably gave this most demanding role to the young Brazilian first soloist, Fernanda Oliveira. |
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The production is coloured by the electro revival of recent years, but also has more dominant dub content, always underlaid with Smith's trademark large, unfiltered bass. |
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Three years later, she became a Mouseketeer in the revival of The mickey mouse Club. |
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It has four storeys and is designed in the Tudor revival style. |
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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. |
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The revival of the brilliant Caryl Churchill play Top Girls at the Aldwych is by and large not only a major event but also an evening to make alarm bells ring. |
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He built his long-term hopes for the prosperity of the church on the shifting sands of revival rather than the steady development of congregation-based programmes. |
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Two Yorkshire cities were yesterday praised for spearheading the region's economic revival and blazing a trail for town planners across the country. |
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He said he began thinking about how much he enjoyed mutton when he was growing up, and how a revival in the meat could boost the incomes of hill farmers. |
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The revival of industry makes such engineering talent critical to regional success. |
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Yet it might provide the foundation for a revival in Tory fortunes. |
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The revival in both Scotland's indigenous languages is partly drawn from the renaissance. |
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The Romantic interest in medievalism also resulted in a revival of interest in the literary fairy tale. |
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Eliot's essays were a major factor in the revival of interest in the metaphysical poets. |
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Bunyan's reputation was further enhanced by the evangelical revival and he became a favourite author of the Victorians. |
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Pinter played the major role of Roote in a 1995 revival at the Minerva Theatre, Chichester. |
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The Celtic revival also led to the emergence of musical and artistic styles identified as Celtic. |
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During the 1990s, Methodism experienced a powerful wave of revival in the nation. |
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Old World folk customs have persisted for decades in North Dakota, with revival of techniques in weaving, silver crafting, and wood carving. |
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Growth in numbers and increasing hostility impressed upon the revival converts a deep sense of their corporate identity. |
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It originated as a revival within the 18th century Church of England and became a separate denomination after Wesley's death. |
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In the 1950s, the convenience and low cost of bottled gas burners led to a revival of hot air ballooning for sport and leisure. |
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A revival in municipal socialism seemed, for a time, a solution to Conservative hegemony for many on the left. |
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In relative terms, it could be held there was a modest revival of British fortunes. |
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Alas, the Leonine revival was soon distorted by attempts to make Thomas the remedy for Cartesian epistemology, which resulted in Neo-Thomism. |
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In the early 19th century the romantic Gothic revival began in England as a reaction to the symmetry of Palladianism. |
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In Wales the late 18th century saw the revival of the eisteddfod tradition, inspired by Iolo Morganwg. |
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From 1998 to 1999, Sheen starred as Mozart in a successful revival of Amadeus. |
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The societies split up into Harrisites and Rowlandites, and it was only with the revival of 1762 that the breach was fairly repaired. |
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There was an attempt to create national symbols with the revival of the union flag and unite coin. |
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The conceit behind Churchkey beer is the revival of the old-time flathead can, the kind you open with a churchkey. |
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Nevertheless, the situation improved in the first half of the 4th century, which was a period of revival and prosperity for Roman Gaul. |
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But the jug band and old-time revival scene present there today was nowhere to be found back then. |
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In June 2010, Cumberbatch led the revival of Terence Rattigan's After the Dance directed by Thea Sharrock at the Royal National Theatre. |
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In 2003, she revisited her first Broadway success, this time as a stage director, with a revival of The Boy Friend. |
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Cicely Tyson, 88, won best leading actress in a play for the revival of 'The Trip to Bountiful. |
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The revival of interest in Celtic visual art came sometime later than the revived interest in Celtic literature. |
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In the later years of the century there was, in Britain at least, a revival of interest in Elgar's music. |
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Polly Findlay's funny modern revival of this anonymous Jacobean black comedy is filled with slapstick, chavs, visual gags and lots of blood. |
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The current revival also garners the highest audience Appreciation Index of any drama on television. |
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His presence as an exclusive performer of sailor songs did much to establish sea music as a revival genre apart from or within folk music. |
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Ruskin's theories indirectly encouraged a revival of Gothic styles, but Ruskin himself was often dissatisfied with the results. |
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However, there was revival from the late 18th century and seasonal and community festivals, mumming and guising all flourished. |
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In the second folk revival the region contributed several figures, with probably the most important being Martin Carthy from Hertfordshire. |
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Since the creation of the People's Republic of China, its government has encouraged a revival of Taoist traditions in codified settings. |
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The second folk revival saw a number of acts drawing on this work, and enjoying some success. |
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It was not until the second folk revival that the full range of song from the region began to gain attention. |
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The sport had a revival in 1978 at Park Avenue Industrial Estate but this was relatively short lived. |
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However, since their revival as leisure songs among laypersons they have been performed in a variety of contexts. |
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Sources for these renditions include books by folklorists and commercial recordings by shanty revival performers. |
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Folk song collecting in the first revival was much less comprehensive than for many other regions. |
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Its aim was to find a new Joseph for his revival of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. |
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There was some interest in sea shanties in the first revival from figures like Percy Grainger. |
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His 1943 revival of William Congreve's Love for Love on tour and then in London received high praise from reviewers. |
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Terfel intended to take 2008 as a sabbatical from opera performances, but broke this to take the title role in WNO's revival of Falstaff. |
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This led to a revival of the tradition, although it may also have affected form and practice. |
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It was popular and influential in the later revival of interest in the Arthurian legends. |
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Since 2005, the SFA have supported the use of Scottish Gaelic on the national team's strip in recognition of the language's revival in Scotland. |
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The BBC speculated that this could mark a revival in interest in his works. |
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For many the Azusa Street revival has become a personal spiritual marker, the Genesis of the Charismatic movement as we know it today. |
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This period sought the revival of classical art forms, including Greek drama and music. |
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Classicism is a recurrent tendency in the Late Antique period, and had a major revival in Carolingian and Ottonian art. |
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In the first few decades of the 20th century, several men's sides were formed, and in 1934 the Morris Ring was founded by six revival sides. |
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Neal was looking for dances for her girls to perform, and so the first revival performance was by young women in London. |
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Each glimmer of a Liberal revival has enhanced his historical stature, if only as the victim or agent of the Liberal decline. |
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Notable examples of Gothic revival architecture are the Houses of Parliament and Fonthill Abbey. |
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Such fears were bolstered by opposition from the Church in Europe to American independence, threatening a revival of Pope Day. |
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Furthermore, the revival of interest in Arthur and the Arthurian tales did not continue unabated. |
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But it then passed the new Judiciary Act of 1802 in April, so that the revival of the old courts never took effect. |
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In 2009, the FIA Formula Two Championship brought about the revival of the F2 series. |
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Art Nouveau in architecture and interior design eschewed the eclectic revival styles of the 19th century. |
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More recently, letterpress printing has seen a revival in an artisanal form. |
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Most impressively, there has been a revival of job growth in these areas. |
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Some of the earliest evidence of a revival in Gothic architecture is from Scotland. |
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A powerful revival broke out at Llangeitho in the spring of 1780, and spread to the south, but not to the north of Wales. |
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A Methodist revival spread in the British West Indies due to the work of British missionaries. |
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After dealing with Ramism, Mack turns to the Aristotelian revival which was born and nurtured in Italy. |
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The 20th century saw the revival of Neopaganism through movements such as Wicca and Druidry. |
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The 14th, 15th and 16th centuries saw a spiritual revival in Europe, in which the question of salvation became central. |
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Prominent groups within this Traditional Witchcraft revival included Andrew Chumbley's Cultus Sabbati and the Cornish Ros an Bucca coven. |
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Such a revival is a revival of spent forces, that can gather only for an early and more complete dispersion. |
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Another branch of the Methodist revival was under the ministry of George Whitefield, resulting in the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion. |
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Their influence saw a revival in the use of images and statues in churches. |
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Conversely, many clergy in the parishes were Evangelicals, as a result of the revival led by John Wesley and others. |
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Adventism began in the 19th century in the context of the Second Great Awakening revival in the United States. |
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The revival in his popularity did not tempt Shaw to write a new play, and he concentrated on prolific journalism. |
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In 1904, a Protestant revival in Wales had tremendous impact on the local population. |
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So did a Broadway revival in 1983 starring Cicely Tyson and Peter Gallagher. |
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Artistic and literary culture in Belgium began a revival towards the late 19th century. |
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Leather fringes, tie-dyed prints and bohemian bags are leading a hippie revival that has been echoed on runways around the world. |
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Punjabi cinema in India has also seen a revival and more and more Punjabi movies are being produced. |
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However, it is experiencing a minor revival among Sephardi communities, especially in music. |
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He returned for his Father's funeral in his hometown of Loughor, South Wales, where the revival began. |
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The revival entered a period of factionalism and public disputes, with each orthography attempting to push the others aside. |
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The publication of this book is often considered to be the point at which the revival movement started. |
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During the 17th century, Pietism emerged in Europe as a movement for the revival of piety and devotion within the Lutheran church. |
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The first local revival occurred in Northampton, Massachusetts, under the leadership of Congregationalist minister Jonathan Edwards. |
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The language has undergone a revival in recent decades and is considered to be an important part of Cornish identity, culture and heritage. |
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The revival of Manx has been aided by the recording work done in the 20th century by researchers. |
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The revival of the Cornish language encouraged a parallel revival of Celtic traditions, which by the 1970s had spurred on Cornish nationalism. |
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The revival was undoubtedly of great influence, and many Welsh seek its recurrence. |
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Much of this stability is credited to a vibrant economy based on the revival of the silk industry, Lucca's traditional cash cow. |
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There are actually some preachers who are timid about urging people to give a good revival love offering. |
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This revival saw thousands of conversions and also exhibited speaking in tongues. |
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Richard sheds a great deal of light on the importance of the Greek revival to Southern culture, especially and unfortunately the slavocracy. |
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The central third descends from the University district in the north, past Nottingham Trent University's Gothic revival Arkwright Building. |
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The imperial court was the centre of a revival of classical learning, a process known as the Macedonian Renaissance. |
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First, there was the revival of terminist logic, to supersede the modist logic fashionable in Paris at the end of the thirteenth century. |
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Late orthodoxy was torn by influences from rationalism, philosophy based on reason, and Pietism, a revival movement in Lutheranism. |
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He dedicates the revival to the Cape Verdean singer whose velvety voice propels it, the late Cesaria Evora. |
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However, the Tudor conquest and colonisation of Ireland in the 16th century marked a revival in the use of English. |
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Though emails and texting have all but obliterated cursive writing, a fashion backlash is evident in the revival of monogramming. |
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Expectations of King James started high but then declined, so by the 1620s there was a nostalgic revival of the cult of Elizabeth. |
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For him the key to the kingdom's spiritual revival was to appoint pious, learned, and trustworthy bishops and abbots. |
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The Welsh revival was not an isolated religious movement but very much a part of Britain's modernisation. |
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A brief revival of East Anglian independence under Eadwald after Offa's death in 796 was soon suppressed by the new Mercian king, Coenwulf. |
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Alfred also reformed the administration of justice, issued a new law code and championed a revival of scholarship and education. |
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Famous journalists, preachers, and even the future Prime Minister Lloyd George, vouched for the genuineness of the revival and of Evan Roberts. |
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By now revival was all over Wales and was not reliant on Evan's being present. |
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In the 18th century, for example, Methodism grew out of Anglican minister John Wesley's evangelical and revival movement. |
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In Europe the Italian Renaissance saw a conscious revival of correct classical styles, initially purely based on Roman examples. |
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A genuine revival of Buddhism has taken place since the late 1980s as an important factor in the national consolidation and spiritual rebirth. |
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Since 2005, the SFA have supported the use of Scottish Gaelic on their teams' strip in recognition of the language's revival in Scotland. |
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International visitors and Pentecostal missionaries would eventually export the revival to other nations. |
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Theresa advocated strict monasticism and a revival of more ancient traditions of penitence. |
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The Carolingian Renaissance led to scientific and philosophical revival of Europe. |
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Archaeological research shows that this involved abandonment of Lundenwic and a revival of life and trade within the old Roman walls. |
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Another is Woodchester Mansion, an unfinished, Gothic revival mansion house in Woodchester Park near Nympsfield in Woodchester, Gloucestershire. |
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Price wanted to distinguish between the genuine revival that he believed was going on and a sham revival he associated with Evan Roberts. |
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Centenarian George Abbott's revival with attitude makes a '50s baseball musical one for the ages. |
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At other times of the year, the county fairgrounds are used for a variety of events, such as revival meetings and high-school graduations. |
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He had been concerned that some of the excesses of the revival were not of God. |
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