What's the difference between reborn and renascent?

Reborn


Definition:

  • (p. p.) Born again.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) "If I thought he was a bully or if I thought he was homophobic then I would take him off," Cooper told MediaGuardian's Radio Reborn conference in central London.
  • (2) Now the government must focus theirs," Miron told MediaGuardian's Radio Reborn conference in central London today.
  • (3) One of the largest independent advertising agencies in London, Mother was responsible for the Orange Film Board ads and the ITV Digital Monkey , since reborn as the simian face of PG Tips .
  • (4) During the Games, the tabloid commented, "we have seen Great Britain reborn and at its best".
  • (5) Tony Abbott reborn as Rudd 2.0 as Turnbull's worst nightmare comes to pass Read more Tony Abbott’s claim that the introduction of Australia’s next generation of submarines were delayed under the Turnbull government’s defence white paper, and that they could have been safely brought into service more quickly, has been categorically rejected by the secretary of the defence department, Dennis Richardson.
  • (6) With the assistant coach, Steve Holland, in charge, they certainly played like a group reborn.
  • (7) By the Fifties, musicologists believed it was a dying form, but in the Seventies, the corrido was reborn, with shoot-outs and drug-runners replacing bandoleros and revolution.
  • (8) Constâncio also harked back to the 1930s, when German philosopher Edmund Husserl warned that Europe faced an existential crisis that would either destroy it, or see it reborn.
  • (9) This is the enemy the reborn Labour party is facing.
  • (10) Mahmoud Jibril, the NTC prime minister, who is now expected to step down, said that the death of Gaddafi had left him feeling "relieved and reborn".
  • (11) But it was Rouhani's tone that was most remarkable, at the end of a week in which he sought to present Iran as a reborn country, following his June election.
  • (12) Radio Reborn • If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly "for publication".
  • (13) There is no doubt that Wireless is a company reborn since the sale of its television assets last year and we are excited by its prospects,” said Thomson.
  • (14) It was dramatic and had a lot of excitement, but it was a rough start.” Holzher then opened a bar on H Street, another area striving to be reborn after being gutted in1968.
  • (15) One historian commented: “The poor family and the poor working family were about to be reborn as a political issue.” The year of Cathy Come Home also saw the launches of the campaigning housing charity Shelter and the Child Poverty Action Group.
  • (16) By tea-time, though, Sunderland’s limitations had been thoroughly exposed by the pace, movement and sheer workrate of a Palace side apparently reborn under Pardew’s tutelage.
  • (17) The nation state remains as resistant as ever to the demands of Europe’s reborn Holy Roman emperors.
  • (18) "Hope" is the answer to the riddle: what dies every morning and is reborn each night?
  • (19) • From $155 a night for two plus $25 per extra guest (some accommodate four or six guests), tinyhousehotel.com The Society Hotel Facebook Twitter Pinterest Photograph: NashCO Photo Originally opened in 1881 as a sailor’s mission – and after stints as a hospital and boarding house – the Society was reborn as a boutique hotel and hostel in 2015.
  • (20) Tehran's reborn symphony orchestra: an ovation before playing a note Read more Although it has become easier to perform music since Rouhani came to power, an increasing number of performances, including one by Tehran’s reborn symphony orchestra , have been cancelled at the last minute after intervention from forces that remain unknown to the artists.

Renascent


Definition:

  • (a.) Springing or rising again into being; being born again, or reproduced.
  • (a.) See Renaissant.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) There's WhatsApp and Kik on the messaging side, along with a (possibly) renascent BBM – not to mention Line, KakaoTalk and WeChat, which have big ambitions to expand beyond their home markets in Asia.
  • (2) But his obsessions were his own, fuelled by a conviction that he was repudiating the wrongs of a renascent Soviet state.
  • (3) Suddenly there was only one team in it as a renascent Newcastle enhanced their thoroughly refreshing, if unlikely, Champions League challenge.
  • (4) The recently emerging interest of urologists in utility of the laparoscope for a variety of urologic surgery is a welcome renascence of this procedure, which has been used mainly by our gynecologic colleagues, in part because of our own lack of pursuit in its development.
  • (5) These issues point to a need for a renascence in the kind of research which is based on clinical observation and on listening to what patients have to tell, with such lines of work brought into much closer contact than before with corresponding laboratory investigation.
  • (6) After four years spent alongside each other in various technical areas it will be strange for Newcastle United’s interim head coach to see his former ally urging on renascent Crystal Palace from the adjacent dugout.
  • (7) There was certainly plenty to admire about the way Guardiola’s team passed the ball and, again, encouraging signs of Raheem Sterling’s renascent form.
  • (8) He’s a much loved guy in our dressing room and for him to be back on the training ground will be really terrific.” By the time Gutiérrez returns Pardew trusts his renascent team will have built on their run of four successive wins.

Words possibly related to "renascent"