Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
I find it much more invigorating to begin something new.
There was something invigorating about being able to say things you felt.
Getting out of the city can, it seems, be invigorating.
But the water pressure on the top floor of this old house was less than invigorating.
There was something invigorating about seeing the morning after a hard night's work.
Then you've got about 10 minutes worth of invigorating music ready to go when you need it.
A dangerous place, for his sort, but the work there was always important, and invigorating.
In fact, this tough past makes for an invigorating visit.
This city has everything needed for a brief and invigorating stay.
But in the performance, the work has an invigorating cumulative effect.
Although the sun was bright, the air felt cool and invigorating.
This year's show is, for the most part, an invigorating affair.
Such was the curious and invigorating afternoon I spent last week.
That can be both scary and invigorating to those who live there.
Taking a swim in a cold lake is very invigorating.
Commercial radio has never seemed more organized and less invigorating.
It's a kind of meditation, and one I find invigorating.
Watching someone else make a bad decision can be wonderfully invigorating.
There is something invigorating about the mountain air for Armstrong.
There he discovered that teaching "was the most invigorating thing I had every done."
Here the air itself seemed clear, vibrant and somehow invigorating.
For many who have never seen a work by a living composer at the Met, that experience in itself should be invigorating.
Then in the invigorating cool of the evening we would travel on, sometimes until late at night.
The place was tranquil and invigorating at the same time.
It certainly does not seem that they find this enjoyable or invigorating.