come·back /ˈkʌmbæk/ ●○○ noun [countableC usually singular]
1make/stage a comebackFASHIONABLEif a person, activity, style etc makes a comeback, they become popular again after being unpopular for a long time 东山再起;重新流行
The miniskirt made a comeback in the late 1980s.
迷你裙在20世纪80年代末又再度流行起来。
Examples from the Corpus
make/stage a comeback• Not that pale faces are making a comeback.• But since then it has been making a comeback.• Even the poisonous dinitrophenol made a comeback.• But Route 66 is making a comeback.• But now at Shortwood farm in Herefordshire, the binder is making a comeback.• The miniskirtmade a comeback in the late 1980s.• Rab tried to stage a comeback.• But for Jones, still troubled by injury, and Barnes, yet to make a comeback, it is still too early.• They, too, made a comeback, winning the presidency with JimmyCarter in 1976.
comeback• Comfort is the reason old-fashioned ceiling fans have been making a comeback, especially during the last decade.• I can never think of a comeback when I need one.• Then, allegations from five femalerecruits during his comeback cut short his new career.• Most of the zipcodes with little or no comeback were concentrated in the EastBay and far North Bay.• Besides, maybe Jansher was growing tired and sensed that I was on the verge of launching a dramatic and telling comeback.