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Definitions

quiescence

[kwee-es-uhns, kwahy-] / kwiˈɛs əns, kwaɪ- /


Example Sentences

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Interestingly, retinoids did not operate on their own: their interplay with signaling molecules such as BMP and WNT influenced whether the stem cells should maintain quiescence or actively engage in regrowing hair.

From Science Daily • Mar. 7, 2024

Some 800 years ago, between the years 1210 and 1240, sporadic fissure eruptions took place across Iceland’s Reykjanes Peninsula—a period of activity that was followed by a long period of quiescence.

From National Geographic • Jan. 17, 2024

The old order has survived and the revolutionaries were either driven into exile, fell into apathy or quiescence.

From BBC • Feb. 20, 2023

Most experts have converged upon an answer: We are paying back a collective “immunity debt,” one accrued from the quiescence of traditional respiratory viruses during the COVID-19 pandemic.

From Slate • Dec. 5, 2022

I answered miserably that the disease hath a period of quiescence before it blooms.

From "The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, Traitor to the Nation, Volume II: The Kingdom on the Waves" by M.T. Anderson




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