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The phrase "am invigorated by" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to express that something energizes or revitalizes you, often in a positive context.
Example: "After a long week, I am invigorated by the thought of spending time in nature this weekend."
Alternatives: "feel energized by" or "am revitalized by".
Exact(3)
I am invigorated by the peace that emerges as I coexist with these beauties.
Each morning, my decision to teach high school biology full time and to perform university research part time is reaffirmed, and I am invigorated by the challenges that this combined career brings.
I am interested in the present-tense mythologies that arise from a revisionist view of history, and am invigorated by the questioning of basic assumptions like the nature of the moon and it's relationship to the earth, a Darwinian model of evolution, time, and (outer) space".
Similar(57)
Somehow, you're invigorated by this.
Elroy was invigorated by Koch's ambitions.
Vendler is particularly convincing on Plath, whose best death dramas are invigorated by dispassionate formality.
VISIT the euro zone and you will be invigorated by gusts of reform.
Both agreed that in a multimedia world, the "antediluvian" novel needs to be invigorated by experimentation.
The old independent boom has been absorbed by the mainstream, which has been invigorated by it".
New York has been invigorated by a one-two punch of Latin American Modernism this season.
Stocks edged higher on Monday, led by energy shares that were invigorated by the continued strength of oil prices.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com