renaissance

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This renaissance has been achieved with a pack conspicuously light on household names.

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Definitions (18)

Toggle American Heritage definitions American Heritage Dictionary (7)

  1. noun A rebirth or revival.
  2. noun The humanistic revival of classical art, architecture, literature, and learning that originated in Italy in the 14th century and later spread throughout Europe.
  3. noun The period of this revival, roughly the 14th through the 16th century, marking the transition from medieval to modern times.

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Examples (50)

  • You are neither facing individuals nor organizations, but are facing a jihadi awakening and renaissance which is shaking the pillars of the entire Islamic world ... —  Intellectual Conservative Politics and Philosophy
  • You also must appreciate, as you take over the presidency of America during its Crusade against Islam and Muslims, that you are neither facing individuals nor organizations, but are facing a Jihadi awakening and renaissance which is shaking the pillars of the entire Islamic world; and this is the fact which you and your government and country refuse to recognize and pretend not to see. —  The Jawa Report
  • You are neither facing individuals nor organizations, but are facing a jihadi awakening and renaissance which is shaking the pillars of the entire Islamic world ..... —  American Thinker
  • "Juke boxes in saloons were in large measure responsible for the renaissance, and one of the first smash hits in these nickel-gobblers was 'Bei Mir Bist Der Schön' as sung by the Andrews Sisters." —  Mike Lynch Cartoons
  • This renaissance has been achieved with a pack conspicuously light on household names. —  Sport news, comment and results | guardian.co.uk
 

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Roget's II Roget's II: The New Thesaurus

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Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, Third Edition by the Editors of the American Heritage® Dictionary. Copyright © 2003, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Etymologies (2)

Toggle American Heritage etymologies American Heritage Dictionary (1)

  1. French, from Old French, from renaistre, to be born again, from Vulgar Latin *renāscere, from Latin renāscī : re-, re- + nāscī, to be born; see genə- in Indo-European roots.

Toggle Century etymologies Century Dictionary (1)

  1. French renaissance, Old French renaissance, renaiscence, from Middle Latin renascentia, new birth: see renascence.
 

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/rəneɪˈsɑns/
by American Heritage

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