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Showing results for recrudescence. Search instead for recrudescences.
Definitions

recrudescence

[ree-kroo-des-uhns] / ˌri kruˈdɛs əns /








Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Who would benefit from the end of community fluoridation and a recrudescence of tooth decay?

From Los Angeles Times • Nov. 22, 2024

What many would see as a remarkable stroke of good fortune is eclipsed in Garrett’s telling by the recrudescence of fears and frustrations that he had briefly consigned to the past.

From Washington Post • Mar. 19, 2020

One concerns the recrudescence of a variety of nationalism that is Orientalist whenever it arises in the Asian context.

From Salon • Jun. 26, 2018

Europe as a whole needed the German economy to recover, but everyone, especially the French, feared a recrudescence of German power.

From The New Yorker • Oct. 17, 2016

Thereupon ensued, in unexampled earnestness, a recrudescence of the great and widespread weariness with the war; and of an open clamor for some immediate conference and compromise for peace.

From Abraham Lincoln's Cardinal Traits; A Study in Ethics, with an Epilogue Addressed to Theologians by Beardslee, Clark S.




Vocabulary lists containing recrudescence


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