Her aim is to revolutioniselife politically, theirs to make it poetical.
The introduction of new elements into an old political system may revolutionise the whole; the addition of new cloth to an old garment may, we all know, rend the whole asunder.
The new constitution in short, in virtue of its federal tendencies, will revolutionise the public life of the United Kingdom.
As it had transformed the means of communication by land, so did the introduction of steam revolutionise travel by sea.
Louis Napoleon had to create an independent and united Italy, Bismarck had to revolutionise Germany and to restore Hungarian independence, and the English manufacturers had to enact the People's Charter.
Most of us have, lying dormant in the bedchamber and infirmary of our brains, convictions which only need to be awakened to revolutionise our lives.
And I believe that Christ's principles are going to revolutionise society as it exists at present.
Lastly, this obedience may, in a moment, revolutionise a life.
If established it will revolutionise our whole views of life.
In the moral world you cannot pull down except by gentleness--you cannot revolutionise except by sympathy.
Christianity and the influence of the foreigner has done much to revolutionise the wedding customs, but all this and more was endured by Ai Do, and she found herself withal the wife of a depraved and vicious man.
Although destined largely to revolutionise design, it was at first used with restraint.
Diplock, has come forward with an invention which bids fair to revolutionise heavy road traffic.
When the Revolution broke out in Poland in 1863, Bakunin was one of the leaders of the expedition of Polish and Russian emigrants that was planned in Stockholm, and which was to revolutionise Russia from the Baltic coast.
The subtraction of the moral sense will not revolutionise human purposes, but simply make them listless.
He was, in short, a very typical example of the serious middle-class man of the Wilberforce period, a man to whom duty was all in all, and who would revolutionise an empire or a continent for the satisfaction of a single moral scruple.
It is scarcely necessary to point out how entirely the application of this principle would revolutionise the old heroic epic, in which the poet decided absolutely the moral relations and moral value of the characters.
They will give light and power to the people all along the river and revolutionise their daily tasks.
But there are others we cannot show here, which will revolutionise the entire country.
The object of this resolution was to prove that the American invention was not a mere floating battery, but was destined to revolutionise the system of armour-plated ships.
I will not continue torevolutionise the Army, because if I should we might find ourselves powerless not only to advance but even to remain on the defensive.
If you will not cease to revolutionise the Army--you must assume power yourselves.
Bottot proposed to him, on the part of the Directory, to revolutionise Italy.
The experiment was successful and the invention complete, but Watt saw clearly that years of unceasing labor might yet pass before the details could all be worked out and the steam engine appear ready to revolutionise the labor of the world.
It is clear at all events that the attention of other nations was keenly drawn to the advent of an agency that promised to revolutionise existing conditions.
Some wonderful result is conceived to be within the range of possibility, which, being obtained, will revolutionise existing modes.
What lies behind and probably near at hand may not merely revolutionise material agencies but human preconceptions as well.
Why in the world should Lola Brandt, whom I have only met three or four times, revolutionise the whole of her life for my sake?
I realised, as far as a man can, how the sudden blasting of a woman's beauty must revolutionise not only her own attitude towards the world, but her conception of the world's attitude towards her.
Truth professed has no transforming power; truth received and fed upon can revolutionise a man's whole character.
The faithful, even though imperfect, following of this exhortation would revolutionise our lives.
A new degree of culture would instantly revolutionisethe entire system of human pursuits.
There are some who believe in the saving power of German music to revolutionise the German nature.
The day, the great day, which was to revolutionise the nation, and to establish a republic on the French model, has passed over, and we find no change.
Has your success been such as to encourage you to think that you can revolutionise your lives, and dethrone the despots that have ruled over you in the past?
You have aspirations after good, desires, some of you, after purity and nobleness of living, which only need to be raised to the height and the dominance in your lives which they ought to possess, in order to revolutionise your whole course.
It was spoken by one who had no superficial estimate of the evil, but who had known in himself the power of Christ to revolutionise a life, and make a man love all he had hated, and hate all he had loved, and fling away all he had treasured.
He attacks the curriculum and tells us we must reduce orrevolutionise instruction and exercise in the dead languages, introduce a broader handling of history, a more inspiring arrangement of scientific courses, and so forth.
It will revolutionise government far more than a mere change from kingdom to republic or vice versa could possibly do; it will give a new and unprecedented sort of government to the world.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "revolutionise" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.