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Showing results for renascence. Search instead for ehrenabzeichen.
Definitions

renascence

[ri-nas-uhns, -ney-suhns] / rɪˈnæs əns, -ˈneɪ səns /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

If a country's industries are experiencing a renascence, they would be importing more semi-finished goods and machinery.

From Economist • Apr. 2, 2013

This renascence in church architecture was chronicled by Princeton-educated Architect G. E. Kidder Smith, 51, who spent the past five successive summers touring Europe.

From Time Magazine Archive

Women remember the late Eugenie Montijo as a certain Empress of France who wore a tilted wren's-nest hat which achieved a brief renascence in the '30s.

From Time Magazine Archive

Reasons for this urban "flattening out": the depression; a renascence of the old-fashioned U. S. passion to own a home, dig in the earth; the migration of city workers to the suburbs.

From Time Magazine Archive

Toward the close of the fifteenth century, a fusion between the humanistic and the vulgar literatures was made; and this is the renascence of Italian—no longer Tuscan, but participated by the race at large.

From Renaissance in Italy: Italian Literature Part 1 (of 2) by Symonds, John Addington