reawake

(redirected from reawoken)
Related to reawoken: reawakened

reawake

(ˌriːəˈweɪk)
vb (intr)
literary to awake again
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola is on record calling Bielsa "the best coach in the world" - and he's revered at Elland Road where he has reawoken sleeping giant Leeds.
Solskjaer's more attacking approach has reawoken everyone at Old Trafford - not just the Chilean star.
Anghenfil tells the story of a legendary monster who has reawoken from his centuries-long slumber to wreak havoc on a small British town.
Whenever a Romanian book written in Latin script fell into my hands--there were still a few that had survived the flames of war and evacuation--in my heart was reawoken the unforgettable enchantment of the books I read when I was in Romanian school.
For others, questions over what will happen to the hotel, an evocative and hulking monument to Lebanon's darkest days, have reawoken an old debate about the fate of other buildings laid to waste by the Civil War.
SUAREZ'S FAMOUS FIVE v Manchester City (home) Premier League August 26 2012 Anfield had been silenced when Yaya Toure's strike cancelled out Martin Skrtel's first-half header, but the fans would be reawoken just three minutes later.
(30) For example, Boccaccio's narrator tells us that the cave beneath Ghismonda's bedchamber has long been forgotten but is now rediscovered, just as her sexual desire is reawoken after a period of mourning.
The forthcoming shake-up next April has reawoken interest in apartments from long-term investors, say CALA Finance Midlands.
If that weren't enough, my long forgotten superstitions have been reawoken by this being room 13, and I am here with the North Wales Paranormal Research group who have just conducted a seance to attract whoever or whatever has been haunting the room.
It continues to discuss how the decline of the historiographical model of classical Meridionalism and the rise of the Third Italy model has reawoken bistoriographical interest in Southern towns and North-eastern Italian middle-sized centres.