Definition of Recrowning

1. Verb. (present participle of recrown) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Recrowning

1. recrown [v] - See also: recrown

Lexicographical Neighbors of Recrowning

recriminating
recrimination
recriminations
recriminative
recriminator
recriminators
recriminatory
recriticality
recross
recrossed
recrosses
recrossing
recrossings
recrown
recrowned
recrowning (current term)
recrowns
recrudency
recrudesce
recrudesced
recrudescence
recrudescences
recrudescencies
recrudescency
recrudescent
recrudescent typhus
recrudescent typhus fever
recrudesces
recrudescing
recruit

Literary usage of Recrowning

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Lives of the Lord Chancellors and Keepers of the Great Seal of England, from by John Campbell Campbell (1847)
"During Henry's short restoration, Waynflete assisted in recrowning him ; but after he and his son had been murdered, and Edward was restored and ..."

2. Europe in the Middle Age by Oliver Joseph Thatcher, Edgar Holmes McNeal (1920)
"In 754 the pope went to visit Pippin and set the approval of the church on the change in dynasty by solemnly recrowning Pippin and anointing him and his ..."

3. Ridpath's History of the World: Being an Account of the Principal Events in by John Clark Ridpath (1910)
"... was to be fulfilled by the recrowning of the past in the city. of the Caesars. But other historical forces were now at work, which were soon to ..."

4. A Legacy of Historical Gleanings by Catharina Van Rensselaer Bonney (1875)
"recrowning of New King. Deliberation as to Visiting America. S. Wells Williams. An Idol Procession. RC Morse. Death of Mrs. Vrooman. ..."

5. Revised Record of the Constitutional Convention of the State of New York by William H. Steele, Charles Elliott Fitch (1900)
"... whether with the Hebrew Judith, Boadicea, the English Queen, Joan of Arc, the French maid, rescuing her country and recrowning her king, ..."

6. Ten Girls from History by Kate Dickinson Sweetser (1912)
"was yet the Sacrament to be administered to the Queen, who knelt, uncrowned, to receive it; then came a recrowning, a re-enthronement, more music and then ..."

Other Resources:

Search for Recrowning on Dictionary.com!Search for Recrowning on Thesaurus.com!Search for Recrowning on Google!Search for Recrowning on Wikipedia!

Search