I must confess that in the presence of this organism where life was suspended, my ideas on reanimation took, as it were, fresh hold upon me.
But at all events, Monsieur, you admit that the reanimation of a man is an extraordinary affair.
The husband, who had little sleep any night in consequence of the weight of anxiety regarding the reanimation of his friend's child, perceiving his wife go out at that dead hour of night, determined to follow her without being noticed.
According to all of the Evangelists it was merely a reanimation of his undecayed body.
The theosophists, however, have the advantage of escaping the dilemma betweenreanimation after a trance and resurrection, since they are convinced that it was possible for Jesus to reassume His body after He had really died.
Schleiermacher's own opinion is what really happened was reanimation after apparent death.
A grand and noble popular reanimation was the response to the renewed vigor and resolution of the Government.
It must be confessed, too, that the people and the army of the Confederacy, in this crisis, found but little source of reanimation in the example of a majority of its public men.
But the evidences of popular reanimation in the South were delusive.
In his grim struggle for reanimation the firm lines about the mouth of the unfortunate man had finally relaxed, and into this ugly opening the Sepoy inserted a strip of the sheet and secured it in a rigid knot behind the neck of his victim.
But it is the story of his physical resurrection we are combating--the reanimation of his flesh and bones after having been subjected three days to the laws of decomposition.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "reanimation" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.