Just as in the 8th century, when a movement to translate ancient Greek and other literature had helped vitalise Arabic literature, another translation movement would offer new ideas and material for Arabic.
12.
On the pitch, the team went from strength to strength and the support given to the club vitalised industrial east Manchester, something the club's original founder Anna Connell strived to do.
13.
Indeed, this gives the inner reason in Hasidic thought why this world falsely perceives itself to exist, independent of Divinity, due to the concealment of the vitalising Divine lifeforce in this world.
14.
A change came in the late 19th century with the plays on the London stage by the Irishmen George Bernard Shaw and Oscar Wilde and the Norwegian Henrik Ibsen, all of whom influenced domestic English drama and vitalised it again.
15.
Beverley was recognised as the Honorary master's degree from Coventry University, 1999, was recognised as Business Desk Ambassador, 2013, and was one of six Finalists, for the Vitalise Business Woman of the Year Award 2015.
16.
In 2014, Campbell was named the winner of the Businesswoman of the Year award from Vitalise, with key credit going to her for her introduction of the free-to-use ATM proposition and European expansion of the YourCash business.
17.
In 1984, the city of Boston gave control of the complex to a private developer, Corcoran-Mullins-Jennison, who re-developed and re-vitalised the property into a residential mixed-income community called Harbor Point Apartments.
18.
It was followed by two other video courses : " Peace in your Home " ( 1988 ) on ways of fostering prayer in the family, and " Loaves of Thanksgiving " ( 1989 ) on re-vitalising the celebration of the weekly Eucharist.
19.
The District Education Revitalisation Programme ( DERP ) was launched in 1994 with an aim to universalise primary education in India by reforming and vitalising the existing primary education system . 85 % of the DERP was funded by the central government and the remaining 15 % was funded by the states.
20.
As a result of his experiments, which took him from the psychiatric hospital to the abbatoir and the zoologic gardens, Cerletti developed a theory that ECT caused the brain to produce vitalising substances, which he called " agro-agonines " ( from the Greek for extreme struggle ).