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Examples

  • Resuscitated a man in the waiting room after he had a heart attack (on being told he didn't qualify for benefits) and was immediately offered promotion and a Civil Service career on the basis, I suspect, that I was handy to have around.

    I've been tagged 2007

  • Resuscitated a man in the waiting room after he had a heart attack (on being told he didn't qualify for benefits) and was immediately offered promotion and a Civil Service career on the basis, I suspect, that I was handy to have around.

    I've been tagged 2007

  • Resuscitated a man in the waiting room after he had a heart attack (on being told he didn't qualify for benefits) and was immediately offered promotion and a Civil Service career on the basis, I suspect, that I was handy to have around.

    44 entries from December 2007 2007

  • Resuscitated the career, even better than it had been before.

    Sherwin Nuland on electroshock therapy 2001

  • Resuscitated the career, even better than it had been before.

    Sherwin Nuland on electroshock therapy 2001

  • Resuscitated the career, even better than it had been before.

    Sherwin Nuland on electroshock therapy 2001

  • Resuscitated Jesus went to Kashmir where he preached, married and died at the age of 120.

    Concise Dictionary of Religion 1993

  • "Resuscitated Philosophers," he observes, "Philosophy says that ridicule can never make anything worse than it is in itself, and whatever is beautiful and good comes out with more lustre from it, and, like gold, is rendered splendid by the strokes of the hammer."

    History of English Humour, Vol. 1 (of 2) With an Introduction upon Ancient Humour Alfred Guy Kingan L'Estrange 1873

  • Resuscitated on the 17th of August, between three and four in the afternoon, he died on the 17th of the following month, at what hour we shall never know.

    The Man With The Broken Ear Edmond About 1856

  • {50} [Resuscitated in vain by Charles Lamb.] {51} J. Grimm (_Wörterbuch_, p. xxvi.): Fällt von ungefähr ein fremdes wort in den brunnen einer sprache, so wird es so lange darin umgetrieben, bis es ihre farbe annimmt, und seiner fremden art zum trotze wie ein heimisches aussieht.

    English Past and Present Richard Chenevix Trench 1846

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