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So one might suppose that her creations are easily revivable.
A 'dead' leaf is no longer part of a living tree, but it may well have a few revivable cells.
But I think it's a thing that is still in people's memories, and it's revivable.
Recently, however, she had begun perusing her mother's extensive notes to determine how many other works might be revivable.
His cells have deteriorated, and while he's technically alive, I'm not certain he's revivable.
How many might still be revivable?
O'Neill's only comedy, the play has "proved to be enduring and revivable especially in university and community theaters".
It is not a revivable curiosity and it is valueless on its own terms.
The official position at Second Chance was that everyone was revivable, and that the organization had full control of all the necessary technology.
The android hovered over the creature and began firing his laser, trying to avoid the currants in hope they might prove revivable.
It's revivable.
The Night Boat was one of Caldwell and Kern's more successful shows but is generally not considered revivable today.
The genre has had little impact on the American theater - serious playwrights don't bother much with the privileged class - and it is rarely thought to be revivable.
Not every classic show is readily revivable, and a reconstruction of the score from the often fragmentary remains of its piano and orchestral parts can be expensive.
In recent years, Miss Nijinska had sifted through her mother's notes to determine precisely how many works by Bronislava Nijinska were revivable.
Since most of the physical repair would be done in fugue anyway, it made some sense to let the old hospital ships work on the seriously wounded and the revivable dead.
"We've got a lot of catching up to do," said David Gockley, general director of the Houston Grand Opera, who pronounced "View" to be "eminently revivable."
Most of his shows were hits and some have proven to be revivable (most recently, "Sweet Charity"), not because of their book or score, but because of Fosse's dances.
Michael Billington (The Guardian) heralded it 'eminently revivable' and Libby Purves (The Times) commented 'Theatrical enterprise like this makes you proud to be British'.
How magnificent it would be if hundreds of new operas would be launched every year, if 10 of these would be immediately revivable, and if one composer would be a Verdi!
The genus Gloeophyllum is characterized by the production of leathery to corky tough, brown, shaggy-topped, revivable fruitbodies lacking a stipe and with a lamellate to daedaleoid or poroid fertile hymenial surfaces.
His use of overt sexuality, brutal violence and over-the-top, satirical humor has soured his relationship with conservative patrons (most notably, a critically derided Rigoletto production for Chicago Lyric that the company declared un-"revivable").
Of course there are those fabulous Gershwin tunes, but no other Gershwin show has proved revivable, and in no other Gershwin show do the songs embody dramatic characters, even when sung out of context or played without the lyrics.
Heliocybe sulcata, the type and sole species, is characterized by thumb-sized, tough, revivable, often dried, mushroom fruitbodies, with a tanned symmetric pileus that is radially cracked into a cartoon sun-like pattern of arranged scales and ridges, distant serrated lamellae, and a scaly central stipe.
One of the strongest Glyndebourne Tours in recent years, this autumn's trilogy mixes two of the house's most revivable productions - Donizetti's L'elisir d'amore () and Humperdinck's Hänsel und Gretel - with an important new staging of Britten's The Rape of Lucretia.