RESURRECTED | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary

Meaning of resurrected in English

(Definition of resurrected from the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus © Cambridge University Press)

Examples of resurrected

resurrected

In English, many past and present participles of verbs can be used as adjectives. Some of these examples may show the adjective use.

To sum up these narratives: a forgotten early music is resurrected in recent times and gradually polished up to achieve a historically informed performance practice.
The human person, on this reading, is an ' ensouled body ' to be resurrected, rather than an immortal and transcendent soul entombed in a material body.
It can't be, as nothing dies and gets resurrected.
So, since the soul remains perpetually, it must be joined again to the body, which is what it means to be resurrected.
Of course, the stress factor is then resurrected and the whole matter is discharged without further ado.
Interspecific interactions in phytophagous insects: competition reexamined and resurrected.
The resurrected human being cannot recall the experiences of the soul because one cannot have some other entity's memories.
Reformation politics powerfully resurrected the view that the religious identity of a people must be considered a function of their ruler's confessional conviction.
Identity of the dying and resurrected body is necessary to make sense of the empty tomb.
The new ways have resurrected old scourges of history : overspecialization and\or gullibility.
Notions that seemed buried forever have suddenly been resurrected.
The fragmentation of identity in modern society has resurrected historians' interest in nationalism and identity.
The medieval troubadours were not resurrected in the nineteenth century, as is sometimes believed.
The craft was resurrected but, in responding to the different influences and demands, it was also radically transformed.
Many remained ineffective and had to be continually resurrected.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
 

Word of the Day

cross-country

UK
/ˌkrɒsˈkʌn.tri/
US
/ˌkrɑːsˈkʌn.tri/

from one side of a country to another; all over a country

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