1 |
RecurTo occur again; to return. For example, a symptom, sign, or disease can recur.
|
2 |
RecurTo come back or to return.
|
3 |
Recurlate 14c., "recover from illness or suffering;" mid-15c., "to return" (to a place), from Latin recurrere "to return, run back, hasten back," figuratively "revert, re [..]
|
4 |
Recurhappen or occur again; "This is a recurring story" return in thought or speech to something fall back: have recourse to; "The government resorted to rationing me [..]
|
5 |
Recurto happen again
|
6 |
Recurv. To happen again or repeatedly, especially at regular intervals.
|
7 |
RecurTo occur again. Recurrence is the return of cancer, at the same site as the original (primary) tumor or in another location, after the tumor had disappeared.
|
8 |
Recur To occur again. Recurrence is the return of cancer, at the same site as the original (primary) tumor or in another location, after the tumor had disappeared.
|
9 |
Recur
(now,_|rare) To have recourse (to) someone or something for assistance, support etc.
* '''1891''', Mary Noailles Murfree, ''In the "Stranger People's" Country'', Nebraska 2005, p. 43:
*: She only [..]
|
10 |
Recurlang=en
1800s=1818
* '''1818''' — . ''''.
*: I returned home not disappointed, for I have said that I had long considered those authors useless whom the professor reprobated; but I returned not at [..]
|
<< Recuperate | Recurrence >> |