1 to bring someone back to life, or bring something back into use or existence after it disappeared: --
Plans were resurrected in the 1960s and published in 1962.
However, the liability is not extinguished and may, if at a later stage circumstances change, be resurrected.
Tourism, effectively destroyed by the 1959 revolution, was then resurrected once again in the 1980s, as a response to economic crisis and severe foreign exchange shortages.
Since the same physical elements will have contributed to the composition of many other bodies that are also to be resurrected, who will inherit these elements ?
The b iography of the house b ecomes intriguing: how did it act, how was it viewed in the former 'body', and why was it resurrected to an afterlife?
Although the election of 283 new division members26 resurrected the divisions, conflicting views about the nature and role of the divisions continued to pose a knotty problem.
The first premise is the assertion that all will be resurrected.
In the body, however, this is not the case, since there will be the same form in the [resurrected] body.