¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Recurrences
1. recurrence [n] - See also: recurrence
Lexicographical Neighbors of Recurrences
Literary usage of Recurrences
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Transactions of the American Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists by American Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (1918)
"The writer has reasons to believe that such late recurrences are ... According to
Labhardt, the time of the appearance of these recurrences depends to a ..."
2. Surgery, Gynecology & Obstetrics by The American College of Surgeons, Franklin H. Martin Memorial Foundation (1922)
"Of 12 cases with no recurrences the following treatments were employed: Cases
Pyelogram or pelvic distention 7 Spontaneous cessation 1 Nephrectomy 1 ..."
3. Surgery, Its Principles and Practice by William Williams Keen (1913)
"recurrences. Lumbar 1, without recurrence. The foregoing table shows 40 ...
recurrences. The cord was not transplanted in 621 cases, with 10 (1.61 per cent. ..."
4. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1907)
"Concerning Reported recurrences after Prostatectomy for Simple Hypertrophy. ...
1906) says that lie formerly believed with others that such recurrences ..."
5. Malaria According to the New Researches by Angelo Celli (1901)
"How are these recurrences explained ? It is difficult to say ; perhaps they ...
Both in mild and in severe fevers, one can have recurrences even at long ..."
6. Progressive Medicine by Hobart Amory Hare (1912)
"Direct 10 without recurrences. Inguinal hernia in the female: Indirect 617 with
8 = 1.29 ... Direct 3 without recurrences. Femoral 141 without recurrences. ..."
7. A College Manual of Rhetoric by Charles Sears Baldwin (1902)
"OTHER recurrences 235. But it will not have escaped an attentive ear that the
noble harmony of this passage has something more than rhythm. ..."
8. A College Manual of Rhetoric by Charles Sears Baldwin (1902)
"3- OTHER recurrences 235. But it will not have escaped an attentive ear that the
noble harmony of this passage has something more than rhythm ..."