释义 |
Definition of revivalism in English: revivalismnoun rɪˈvʌɪv(ə)lɪz(ə)mrəˈvaɪvəˌlɪzəm mass noun1Belief in or the promotion of a revival of religious fervour. (宗教的)奋兴运动 Christians of the 19th century combined revivalism with social reform Example sentencesExamples - When charismatic revivalism reaches as far and wide as the Coptic church in Ethiopia, the Catholic church in India, and the Orthodox church in Romania, then we can confidently say that the phenomenon is a global Christian one.
- Adding to the concern of Muslim observers, the Javanese Hindu movement is part of a wider national phenomenon of Hindu revivalism and expansion.
- In a larger practical sense, however, evangelical revivalism shared basically Unitarian assumptions about the moral autonomy of children.
- Raised during the period of New England revivalism, she refused to make her public confession of faith, and by the age of thirty, she had stopped attending church services altogether.
- We simply don't know how Islamic culture will evolve; it will probably not be along paths that we project from our own experience, such as European secularization or American revivalism.
- It is about Catholic revivalism during the early modern era, yet the point Chatellier is making is that this revivalism is best understood by reference to medieval models of religious enthusiasm.
- Writing with pronounced respect and admiration for the preacher, colored by a serious concern about method, Morrison offered an unusually astute and critical analysis of American revivalism.
- In particular, the high-church tradition of the Christian Reformed Church looks skeptically on revivalism and independent Congregationalism.
- In this, he resisted the movement toward Islamic revivalism that began to take root following Israel's victory in the 1967 war.
- When he turned to the American scene, Latourette reported Baptist growth through revivalism and emphasized conscious conversion and frontier preachers who spoke the language of the people.
- Based on preliminary ethnographic research in five Javanese communities with major Hindu temples, I explore the political history and social dynamics of Hindu revivalism.
- My impression is that he tends to see the world through the glasses which his hosts have selected for him, for example, by adopting the Indian Communist view of Hindu revivalism without getting to know it first-hand.
- Our society has been moving toward both the laissez-faire capitalism and puritanical fundamentalist revivalism of the nineteenth century in recent years.
- Its doctrines were those of evangelical revivalism: sin, conversion, justification by faith, hell, and heaven.
- The Methodist bishops refused to tolerate grass-roots revivalism within the ranks and ejected the most active proponents of Holiness just as the Wesley brothers had been ejected by the Anglican establishment a century before.
- Indeed, in the colonial period, countershifts, with various forms of revivalism of the Shakti cult, were observed.
- As my ailing father spoke of this background, he had come to embrace his Marrano heritage and the Sephardic revivalism that had become part of contemporary Jewish-American culture.
- The first of early Crusades were part of a religious revivalism.
- Furthermore, this form of revivalism is often linked to a call for action which has not merely conservative or traditionalist implications.
- In the 1930s, the supporters of Buddhist revivalism openly sympathised with Nazi Germany and Hitler's racial theories of Aryan supremacy.
- 1.1 A tendency or desire to revive a former custom or practice.
复古倾向,复古主义 70年代的复古倾向。 Example sentencesExamples - To the extent they fight against the new revivalism of that old time ideology of liberty, they give aid and comfort to the enemy.
- These ten essays explore dimensions of Moody's doctrine, preaching methods, and extraordinary role in advancing the urban revivalism that swept the U.S. and Britain in the last part of the century.
- What's worse is that the world isn't exactly short of this particular brand of blues revivalism at the moment, and The Black Keys lack the lightness of touch and pop nuance to stand out from the crowd.
- Broadway musicals in the 21st century are a pastiche, a mixture of rock and roll revivalism, fan friendly stalwarts, campy film to footlight adaptations, and brazen experimentation.
- Futurist, with its muddy, one-note punk-thrash revivalism that belies his talents as a versatile studio auteur, is as frustratingly unremarkable and immobile as the governments he so blatantly rails against.
- Irish revivalism, an example of linguistic nationalism, arrived only when the language was already in grave peril.
- I had grand visions of dropping my obscure '80s post-punk gems on people, of sowing the seeds for '90s revivalism via some well placed selections.
- Similarly it is hard to believe that such writers as Richards and Pevsner would revert to pure revivalism, having both written with considerable authority of Modernism's specific place in a historical context.
- Not counting The Darkness' campy unitard revivalism or the robed gospel cult of The Polyphonic Spree, most of indie rock's current darlings get their style from a thrift store rather than a costume trunk.
- Contemporary architectural styles, inspired by Europe, began to replace Ottoman revivalism in institutional building after 1927.
- The growth of revivalism as a collective phenomenon in recent decades might also be seen in relation to more general reactions against nostalgia.
- The most remarkable thing about Kenna's shameless new wave revivalism is that Fred Durst likes it - enough to take Kenna aboard his inappropriately named Flawless imprint, anyway.
- Recent films that revisit 1980s youth emerge from traditions of revivalism in the context of the domestic and collective importance of television.
- Is there a reason for obsessively photographing and transmuting photographs, other than to offer them as mere aesthetic delectation in an attitude or revivalism that aligns these pictures with the tradition of the archaic in modern art?
- The continual ‘happy-clappy’ attitude of the left's revivalism and its dead-end sect perspectives irked him.
- The crucial difference, however, is that while the French duo inflects its disco revivalism with cheek and playful production, this Kentucky quartet writes songs without an iota of flair or originality.
- This new racial identity was not a product of ethnic revivalism.
- The soft-core version included Raj revivalism, the cult of Merchant Ivory and interminable documentaries, coffee-table books, fashion accessories.
- The beauty revivalism of the 1990s often expressed dissatisfaction with the priority postmodern discourse placed on the social and symbolic regulation of the subject.
- Sean Griffiths, Charles Holland and Sam Jacob of Fat have had a huge amount of fun dancing around the edges of architecture and public art, promoting their brand of postmodern revivalism.
Derivativesnoun & adjective rɪˈvʌɪvəlɪst Though the prominent synths make Metric a part of the growing pool of hip New Wave revivalists in rock music, fundamentally what they make are straightforward, dancy, hook-filled pop songs that you can't bleach out of your brain. Example sentencesExamples - His body language was all wrong, a mixture of smalltown lawyer and revivalist preacher.
- The most revivalist denominations and local churches with strong traditions of lay preaching remained leery of a process which appeared to value learning and credentialism as much as piety and calling.
- Jonathan Edwards, 1703-1758, achieved greatness as an American preacher-evangelist, principal of a college and revivalist.
- Dramatic and romantic, its Irish-speaking population showed a way of life obviously distinctive from that in other corners of this island - a model that proved indispensable to nationalists and cultural revivalists alike.
adjective rɪvʌɪv(ə)ˈlɪstɪk In particular, the individualism of the American frontier and the Separate Baptist revivalistic legacy characterized the methods, and eventually the theology, of Southern Baptist missions and evangelism. Example sentencesExamples - The fits, trances and visions that attended revivalistic religion in this era were seen by many as evidence of the workings of the Holy Spirit.
- What is most striking about the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s is that its revivalistic forms and tendencies were often obvious to the participants - ministers and laypersons alike - and remain prominent in their memories.
- Professor Pandey, according to the letter, is known for his revivalistic scholarship and has been enthusiastically propagating Dr Joshi's agenda.
- The other distinct feature of the religious South was the cultural hegemony (Hill calls it an ‘establishment’) of revivalistic evangelical Protestantism.
Definition of revivalism in US English: revivalismnounrəˈvaɪvəˌlɪzəmrəˈvīvəˌlizəm 1Belief in or the promotion of a revival of religious fervor. (宗教的)奋兴运动 Example sentencesExamples - Furthermore, this form of revivalism is often linked to a call for action which has not merely conservative or traditionalist implications.
- In the 1930s, the supporters of Buddhist revivalism openly sympathised with Nazi Germany and Hitler's racial theories of Aryan supremacy.
- In particular, the high-church tradition of the Christian Reformed Church looks skeptically on revivalism and independent Congregationalism.
- Adding to the concern of Muslim observers, the Javanese Hindu movement is part of a wider national phenomenon of Hindu revivalism and expansion.
- Indeed, in the colonial period, countershifts, with various forms of revivalism of the Shakti cult, were observed.
- Based on preliminary ethnographic research in five Javanese communities with major Hindu temples, I explore the political history and social dynamics of Hindu revivalism.
- The first of early Crusades were part of a religious revivalism.
- My impression is that he tends to see the world through the glasses which his hosts have selected for him, for example, by adopting the Indian Communist view of Hindu revivalism without getting to know it first-hand.
- Our society has been moving toward both the laissez-faire capitalism and puritanical fundamentalist revivalism of the nineteenth century in recent years.
- When charismatic revivalism reaches as far and wide as the Coptic church in Ethiopia, the Catholic church in India, and the Orthodox church in Romania, then we can confidently say that the phenomenon is a global Christian one.
- Writing with pronounced respect and admiration for the preacher, colored by a serious concern about method, Morrison offered an unusually astute and critical analysis of American revivalism.
- Raised during the period of New England revivalism, she refused to make her public confession of faith, and by the age of thirty, she had stopped attending church services altogether.
- As my ailing father spoke of this background, he had come to embrace his Marrano heritage and the Sephardic revivalism that had become part of contemporary Jewish-American culture.
- It is about Catholic revivalism during the early modern era, yet the point Chatellier is making is that this revivalism is best understood by reference to medieval models of religious enthusiasm.
- The Methodist bishops refused to tolerate grass-roots revivalism within the ranks and ejected the most active proponents of Holiness just as the Wesley brothers had been ejected by the Anglican establishment a century before.
- When he turned to the American scene, Latourette reported Baptist growth through revivalism and emphasized conscious conversion and frontier preachers who spoke the language of the people.
- Its doctrines were those of evangelical revivalism: sin, conversion, justification by faith, hell, and heaven.
- We simply don't know how Islamic culture will evolve; it will probably not be along paths that we project from our own experience, such as European secularization or American revivalism.
- In this, he resisted the movement toward Islamic revivalism that began to take root following Israel's victory in the 1967 war.
- In a larger practical sense, however, evangelical revivalism shared basically Unitarian assumptions about the moral autonomy of children.
- 1.1 A tendency or desire to revive a former custom or practice.
复古倾向,复古主义 Example sentencesExamples - Irish revivalism, an example of linguistic nationalism, arrived only when the language was already in grave peril.
- These ten essays explore dimensions of Moody's doctrine, preaching methods, and extraordinary role in advancing the urban revivalism that swept the U.S. and Britain in the last part of the century.
- The most remarkable thing about Kenna's shameless new wave revivalism is that Fred Durst likes it - enough to take Kenna aboard his inappropriately named Flawless imprint, anyway.
- The soft-core version included Raj revivalism, the cult of Merchant Ivory and interminable documentaries, coffee-table books, fashion accessories.
- Futurist, with its muddy, one-note punk-thrash revivalism that belies his talents as a versatile studio auteur, is as frustratingly unremarkable and immobile as the governments he so blatantly rails against.
- This new racial identity was not a product of ethnic revivalism.
- Sean Griffiths, Charles Holland and Sam Jacob of Fat have had a huge amount of fun dancing around the edges of architecture and public art, promoting their brand of postmodern revivalism.
- Recent films that revisit 1980s youth emerge from traditions of revivalism in the context of the domestic and collective importance of television.
- The continual ‘happy-clappy’ attitude of the left's revivalism and its dead-end sect perspectives irked him.
- Is there a reason for obsessively photographing and transmuting photographs, other than to offer them as mere aesthetic delectation in an attitude or revivalism that aligns these pictures with the tradition of the archaic in modern art?
- To the extent they fight against the new revivalism of that old time ideology of liberty, they give aid and comfort to the enemy.
- Similarly it is hard to believe that such writers as Richards and Pevsner would revert to pure revivalism, having both written with considerable authority of Modernism's specific place in a historical context.
- Contemporary architectural styles, inspired by Europe, began to replace Ottoman revivalism in institutional building after 1927.
- The growth of revivalism as a collective phenomenon in recent decades might also be seen in relation to more general reactions against nostalgia.
- What's worse is that the world isn't exactly short of this particular brand of blues revivalism at the moment, and The Black Keys lack the lightness of touch and pop nuance to stand out from the crowd.
- I had grand visions of dropping my obscure '80s post-punk gems on people, of sowing the seeds for '90s revivalism via some well placed selections.
- The crucial difference, however, is that while the French duo inflects its disco revivalism with cheek and playful production, this Kentucky quartet writes songs without an iota of flair or originality.
- Not counting The Darkness' campy unitard revivalism or the robed gospel cult of The Polyphonic Spree, most of indie rock's current darlings get their style from a thrift store rather than a costume trunk.
- Broadway musicals in the 21st century are a pastiche, a mixture of rock and roll revivalism, fan friendly stalwarts, campy film to footlight adaptations, and brazen experimentation.
- The beauty revivalism of the 1990s often expressed dissatisfaction with the priority postmodern discourse placed on the social and symbolic regulation of the subject.
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