¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Recrudescing
1. recrudesce [v] - See also: recrudesce
Lexicographical Neighbors of Recrudescing
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 ..."