Definition of Recrudescing

1. Verb. (present participle of recrudesce) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Recrudescing

1. recrudesce [v] - See also: recrudesce

Lexicographical Neighbors of Recrudescing

recrown
recrowned
recrowning
recrowns
recrudency
recrudesce
recrudesced
recrudescence
recrudescences
recrudescencies
recrudescency
recrudescent
recrudescent typhus
recrudescent typhus fever
recrudesces
recrudescing (current term)
recruit
recruitable
recruited
recruitee
recruitees
recruiter
recruiters
recruiting
recruiting-sergeant
recruiting response
recruitment
recruitment detection
recruitment zone
recruitments

Literary usage of Recrudescing

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

1. Transactions of the Association of American Physicians by Association of American Physicians (1905)
"As regards the nature of cirrhosis, then, I may say with Kretz that it is a chronic focal or localized, recrudescing degeneration and partial destruction of ..."

2. The Pituitary Body and Its Disorders: Clinical States Produced by Disorders by Harvey Cushing (1912)
"... an extirpated lobe may show areas of epithelial hyperplasia typical of the process. As a rule, however, with a continuous or recrudescing hyperplasia— ..."

3. From Nebula to Nebula: Or, The Dynamics of the Heavens, Containing a Broad by George Henry Lepper (1917)
"... gradually into view, and then we perceive a spiral nebula, evenly poised like a giant pinwheel on a center, recrudescing into a new cycle of existence. ..."

4. From Nebula to Nebula: Or, The Dynamics of the Heavens, Containing a Broad by George Henry Lepper (1919)
"... gradually into view, and then we perceive a spiral nebula, evenly poised like a giant pinwheel on a center, recrudescing into a new cycle of existence. ..."

5. From Nebula to Nebula: Or, The Dynamics of the Heavens, Containing a Broad by George Henry Lepper (1919)
"... gradually into view, and then we perceive a spiral nebula, evenly poised like a giant pinwheel on a center, recrudescing into a new cycle of existence. ..."

6. On the Temperature in Diseases: A Manual of Medical Thermometry by Carl August Wunderlich (1871)
"A course with recrudescing fastigium not infrequently occurs as a modification both of the continuous and remittent types, and is remarked in those cases ..."

7. Insurance and Crime: A Consideration of the Effects Upon Society of the by Alexander Colin Campbell (1902)
"For a hundred and fifty years, the making of bogus insurance offices was a favourite form of fraud in England—not always equally popular, but recrudescing ..."

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