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How To Use Re-emerge In A Sentence

  • The need for aphicide should be assessed on crops that are just emerging, but which have already had a pre-emergence herbicide. FWi - All News
  • On a hunch, the researchers radioed the ground-based team and urged them to continue gathering data when the star re-emerged from behind Uranus.
  • He said that in the run up to the political contest elements of the extreme right would re-emerge in Oldham looking to exploit divisions for political gain.
  • The international cocaine trade re-emerged in Colombia in the 1970s, courtesy of a mafia which cut its teeth on contraband whiskey, marijuana and luxury goods.
  • I am convinced that the powerful re-emergence of monotypes and woodcuts relates directly to the explosions and reverberations of new technologies.
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  • This strategy is helping the prison system to outlast current budget constraints so it can re-emerge once state revenues recover.
  • Amid the problems, Paul Smith re-emerged as a seam bowler demanding respect.
  • The other is the re-emergence of the old cleavages of rich and poor.
  • The title chimes with his managerial re-emergence at West Bromwich Albion after a torrid 191 days in charge of Liverpool. Roy Hodgson has no self-pity after his re-emergence at West Brom
  • Everyone agrees there is a lot more to do, but for now he has made Naples the most exciting of all Italian cities to visit, in the first flush of its re-emergence: dynamic, unselfconscious, and as distinctive as it has always been.
  • This championship has seen a re-emergence of an attacking game long dormant, but there have been worrying signs too. Times, Sunday Times
  • But as long as the political monopoly of the slaveholders was broken, enfranchised blacks would have the power to prevent the re-emergence of aristocracy and inequality.
  • Later in the season, the caterpillars re-emerge to spin cocoons and overwinter under the loose bark of the trees.
  • Fall 2002 is marked by a retro look, which is highlighted by the re-emergence of corduroys, only these cords have thin ridges rather than the thicker ones that were popular last year.
  • It hopes that once it has restructured the business it can re-emerge as a supplier of ink for computer printers. Times, Sunday Times
  • We will soon see the re-emergence of class warfare as Britain becomes a nation for the rich and privileged. Times, Sunday Times
  • Yet the exhibit still reveals the intricate machinery that made the New Look work: corsets, brassieres and girdles re-emerged from decades past to discipline the female body into the latest couture creations.
  • Twenty years later, these theories re-emerged in comics like "Pharaon: The Ice Brain," in which spies uncover a Nazi cabal bunkered inside a Tibetan mountain, where they have built a supercomputer "to intoxicate the world and bewitch the people! Tibet Goes KABOOM!
  • The usher vanished under the courtroom table to check and when she re-emerged said: ‘That seems to have managed it’.
  • On a hunch, the researchers radioed the ground-based team and urged them to continue gathering data when the star re-emerged from behind Uranus.
  • If Ryder's artistic rehabilitation works out over the summer, she will have re-emerged at the age of 37 as one of the most impressive veterans of a 1980s Hollywood bratpack scene that has seen many casualties. Film | guardian.co.uk
  • This album was Everlast's re-emergence as a solo artist after his tour with the hard-edged Irish rap group, House of Pain.
  • While Tokay struggled through socialism to re-emerge in splendour, Cotnari, which used to appear in Paris restaurants as ‘Pearle de la Moldovi’ faded from sight.
  • We will soon see the re-emergence of class warfare as Britain becomes a nation for the rich and privileged. Times, Sunday Times
  • A side who had trooped off with a sense of foreboding against the Swedes somehow re-emerged five nights later, entirely recuperated and forming an unrecognisably more confident unit.
  • It hopes that once it has restructured the business it can re-emerge as a supplier of ink for computer printers. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Irish Small & Medium Enterprises Association (ISME) today warned about a dramatic rise in black economy activities and the re-emergence of a 'nixer' culture, which is undermining legitimate businesses, threatening jobs and livelihoods in the process. Top Stories: BreakingNews.ie
  • That is how high-growth business will re-emerge to drive the economic engine. Times, Sunday Times
  • Boiled in stock for six hours, meat picked clean from the bone, mixed with herbs and white wine, and pressed for two days to re-emerge as pig's head terrine, which is then sliced, crumbed, deep fried and served with sauce gibiche. Stuff.co.nz - Stuff
  • In the USA, extensive use is now made of a wide range of effective herbicides for the control of weeds, including naptalam, allidochlor, chloramben, vernolate, diphenamid, prometryn; normally application is pre-planting or pre-emergence. Chapter 30
  • There are few signs that this is the desk of a cartoonist, and with the exception of a small drawing of Handala on a white board nobody would guess that the cubical is the place that the Palestinian icon is making a slow re-emergence. Annie's letters
  • Chemical control gives excellent results: pre-emergence application of, for example, linuron or diuron with subsequent application of shielded sprays of paraquat, has proved successful. Chapter 11
  • Once within your compound's adobe walls you never really need to re-emerge.
  • His father re-emerged with a blackthorn stick, looking ready to do vicious battle; but when he saw his opponent, he began to laugh.
  • I nodded, turning as Zannah re-emerged from the bathroom in her bathrobe and a towel wrapped round her long auburn hair.
  • In this light, the liberal project inherent in Jones's work outlined by Findlay re-emerges in Owenson and Moore's allegorization of Irish affairs and in Hamilton and Inchbald's feminist practice. Introduction
  • A Conservative councillor once hid up a chimney in the debating chamber and re-emerged to swing a crucial vote.
  • The contractors had already sprayed for cockies, fleas, flies and mice but the cockies were guaranteed to re-emerge once the effect of the watered-down spray lost its potency.
  • Kim's public re-emerge comes as North Korea celebrates what it calls a successful missile launch. CNN Transcript Apr 10, 2009
  • This championship has seen a re-emergence of an attacking game long dormant, but there have been worrying signs too. Times, Sunday Times
  • Pre-emergence applications of 2,4-D, MCPA, monuron and diuron at the rate of 1.7 kg/ha have been recommended for weed control. Chapter 10
  • The paper only addressed the occurrence of bird flu in pigs in 2003, and made no mention of his remark last week that it had re-emerged in swine this year too.
  • GM will provide $250 million of pre-emergence liquidity through July 31. Delphi Reaches Accords to Emerge From Chapter 11
  • When vaccine rates drop, deadly diseases can re-emerge – as we've seen recently with the whooping cough epidemic in California.
  • Yet the exhibit still reveals the intricate machinery that made the New Look work: corsets, brassieres and girdles re-emerged from decades past to discipline the female body into the latest couture creations.
  • The stream is fascinating, disappearing from view from time to time, to re-emerge from beneath road or path in an ever delightful manner.
  • The interest in death which had always permeated his work now re-emerged, transformed from the ghoulish into the pensive.
  • Over the past seven days the specter of terrorism has re-emerged from the grave to which it had been consigned by some overeager commentators on both sides of the Atlantic.
  • Howie watched the kitchen door for her re-emergence, Siddhartha forgotten. THE GREAT AND SECRET SHOW
  • The experiences of the liberal-democratic period can be used to prevent the re-emergence of these pacifistic illusions.
  • The region relapsed into months of police crackdowns, extreme violence and the re-emergence of the Republican movement - euphemised simply as ‘The Troubles.’
  • Chemical herbicides are becoming increasingly used in the more sophisticated areas; pre-emergence herbicides include prometryn, diuron and nitrofen. Chapter 32
  • The re-emergence of the avant-garde, modernism's trope par excellence, marks the return of the repressed in contemporary art.
  • The hooligan element has re-emerged at every level of football.
  • It is almost as if by preventing modern development the US has created the conditions for the re-emergence of a state of affairs more representative of the 14th or 15th centuries.
  • Chemical control gives excellent results: pre-emergence application of, for example, linuron or diuron with subsequent application of shielded sprays of paraquat, has proved successful. Chapter 11
  • After seven months as a mostly low-profile attorney general, he re-emerged as a pugnacious, crusading politician, fully in keeping with his past as one of the Senate's most passionately conservative members.
  • Slavery emerges from powerful psychological forces in the unconscious, and consequently is part of the political unconscious that constantly re-emerges into public expression.
  • Their sudden re-emergence is greeted as a miracle by some, but is unwelcome and disturbing for others. Times, Sunday Times
  • The largest single threat to a bondholder is the risk that inflation will re-emerge with surprising strength. The Daily Reckoning
  • About a quarter of the lunar diameter was eclipsed, and re-emergence occurred about a quarter of an hour before sunrise.
  • Denied by the golden goal in 1996 they have re-emerged a stronger and more forceful unit.
  • Poland re-emerged as an independent country after World War I, but it found itself once again partitioned by Germany and Russia in 1939. Matthew Yglesias » 18th Century Polish Strategic Dilemmas
  • Eventually you climb up above the bed of the river into the Salon Noir, a cavern about twenty by thirty yards, with a ceiling from which no light returns and just a few vowels re-emerge as echoes.
  • This cameo is a perfect example of playing against type, and it probably has something to do with a bit of an Alice Cooper re-emergence around the early nineties. Top 10 Rock Star Cameos in Movies » Scene-Stealers
  • Florence re-emerged holding a plastic raincoat over herself and the baby, and got into the back seat.
  • The approach that is being taken in the bill is the approach of concealment, which is the proper approach, because if somebody reoffends, then the offence can re-emerge.
  • The lake invades the glacier's deep chasms and crevasses, detonating thunderous explosions as great shards of ice detach and re-emerge as icebergs.
  • He re-emerged in 1987 and 1991 to fight constitutional proposals to recognise Quebec as a distinct society.
  • He checked into rehab, straightened out his head and re-emerged with a new sense of purpose.
  • A gang of troublemakers which attaches itself to York City Football Club has re-emerged - and a member has posted a site dedicated to the group on to the Internet.
  • Firstly and indisputably, there was the pre-emergence photography session with "Green Helmet" posing inside the basement, with the body of the baby being unearthed. Part 8 - Discussion and conclusions
  • Following their re-emergence in early spring, the mature peacock butterflies feed on flowering sallows, dandelions, wild marjoram, danewort and clover fields.
  • Their sudden re-emergence is greeted as a miracle by some, but is unwelcome and disturbing for others. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is always an interesting phenomenon how some ideas, and/or ways of talking emerge, re-emerge or develop in different places around the world.
  • Tillage can incorporate pre-emergence herbicides reducing the need for moisture.
  • Thus a political dilemma has re-emerged.
  • With the re-emergence of such Malthusian conflicts, international cooperation may be tested to destruction.
  • The hotel re-emerged in a new, swank avatar which had no space to spare for a plebeian ice cream parlour.
  • This championship has seen a re-emergence of an attacking game long dormant, but there have been worrying signs too. Times, Sunday Times
  • Twenty years later, these theories re-emerged in comics like "Pharaon: The Ice Brain," in which spies uncover a Nazi cabal bunkered inside a Tibetan mountain, where they have built a supercomputer "to intoxicate the world and bewitch the people! Tibet Goes KABOOM!
  • Energy seems to vanish and re-emerge in dramatic swings.
  • While hand-weeding is the most common practice, pre-emergence spraying with atrazine or ametryn will control weeds until the plants have sprouted; subsequently paraquat carefully applied with a shielded spray may be used. Chapter 37
  • The application of the pre-emergence herbicide diuron at 1.6 kg/ha has been recommended; other effective herbicides are atrazine, prometryn and ametryn. Chapter 31
  • Ancient drama re-emerged in the sixteenth century as a model for a new form of spectacular musical entertainment: opera. The Times Literary Supplement
  • When everybody else re-emerges only a couple of minutes later, matted in sweat and grime, we are deeply glad to have wimped out.
  • In general, organic arsenicals require a minimum of two applications, spaced 14 days apart, to have efficacy anywhere near that of most commercially available pre-emergence herbicides.
  • Later in the season, the caterpillars re-emerge to spin cocoons and overwinter under the loose bark of the trees.
  • Twenty years later, these theories re-emerged in comics like "Pharaon: The Ice Brain," in which spies uncover a Nazi cabal bunkered inside a Tibetan mountain, where they have built a supercomputer "to intoxicate the world and bewitch the people! Tibet Goes KABOOM!
  • He dived into my closet and re-emerged with a floating black skirt, a dark scarlet tank-top, and black heels.
  • With age, the weakening immune system may allow the virus to re-emerge as shingles: a painful rash that causes pain lasting for months or years.
  • Pre-emergence applications of 2,4-D, MCPA, monuron and diuron at the rate of 1.7 kg/ha have been recommended for weed control. Chapter 10
  • With the re-emergement of the feminist movement in the 1960s, these patriarchal consuetudes have been brought to the attention of legal systems throughout the world, and attempts to rectify them in the name of equality have been done through various means, and to disparate levels of success.
  • The characteristic smirk that I saw Marni give so many times over the past few years, which I came to love and to fear at the same time: the twinkle in her eyes, a turn of her head to the side while she kept you in sight, followed by that unmistakable pre-emergence of a bright smile. Archive 2010-03-01
  • A finch-like flock flurried on a field and high in the sky a fast-gliding flock, perhaps of fieldfares, split then re-emerged.
  • About a quarter of the lunar diameter was eclipsed, and re-emergence occurred about a quarter of an hour before sunrise.
  • Now infrasound monitoring has re-emerged in importance due to the number of countries that may be capable of developing nuclear weapons.
  • Also, so as to discourage the re-emergence of a bribable judiciary, salaries were high.
  • It hopes that once it has restructured the business it can re-emerge as a supplier of ink for computer printers. Times, Sunday Times
  • That undercurrent of alienation now has re-emerged as the well-financed, well-directed tea party, challenging the very legitimacy of so much which has sustained us. Stanley Kutler: THE TEA PARTY: DUPED SERVANTS OF POWER
  • Chemical control gives excellent results: pre-emergence application of, for example, linuron or diuron with subsequent application of shielded sprays of paraquat, has proved successful. Chapter 11
  • And, secondly, the work they do with them while they are in custody is doing very little to straighten them out once they re-emerge.
  • His confessions of guilt are merely a thin cover for re-emergent desires within the German ruling class.
  • What the collapse of the Soviet Union meant at the end of 1991 was the re-emergence of a singularized Russian state, a normal state. Press Briefing On Presidents Trip To Russia
  • It was around this time last year that veterans re-emerged as a potent political force to the detriment of Senator Kerry.
  • The present deficiency has been blamed for the re-emergence of rickets, a childhood disease that involves softening of the bones. Times, Sunday Times
  • A finch-like flock flurried on a field and high in the sky a fast-gliding flock, perhaps of fieldfares, split then re-emerged.
  • This is a theme which will re-emerge when we consider acquired disorders of language in Chapter 9.
  • Fan nozzles (see page 225) should be used to make pre-emergence and postemergence applications over the soil and small weeds. Chapter 10
  • A side who had trooped off with a sense of foreboding against the Swedes somehow re-emerged five nights later, entirely recuperated and forming an unrecognisably more confident unit.
  • This means, for example, not allowing a dangerous, historical Sino-Japanese confrontation to re-emerge.
  • If only she could abjure art the way she abjured religion and write less self-consciously, the true artist would re-emerge from what is beginning to seem like indefinite hibernation.
  • Chemical herbicides are becoming increasingly used in the more sophisticated areas; pre-emergence herbicides include prometryn, diuron and nitrofen. Chapter 32
  • Of the films in the trilogy, two were shot in the pre-Emergency period and the last one came out in 1975.
  • The emergence, or re-emergence in some cases, of Nation-States which intended to organize internal power according to their own values.
  • We will see old forms from the 1960s re-emerge like agit prop and new forms will be generated to communicate ideology and politics. 20 predictions for the next 25 years
  • Ever since the ban was revoked four years ago the consumption of iodised salt in India has dropped by up to 44% in some states, sparking concerns about the re-emergence of iodine deficiency disorders.
  • The use of pre-emergence herbicides has been suggested: eg atrazine at 1. 5-3 kg/ha to which TCA 5 kg/ha may be added on heavy soils to improve grass control, and chloramben at 3-6. 5 kg/ha. Chapter 37
  • A screen showed some odd home movies and clips while the Beasties disappeared again, only to re-emerge in orange tracksuits to play another huge bracket of old and new faves.
  • I've long held a similar belief, namely that modern science would lead to a re-emergence of an old religious idea, a blend of naturalism and deism.
  • That is how high-growth business will re-emerge to drive the economic engine. Times, Sunday Times
  • This championship has seen a re-emergence of an attacking game long dormant, but there have been worrying signs too. Times, Sunday Times
  • The application of the pre-emergence herbicide diuron at 1.6 kg/ha has been recommended; other effective herbicides are atrazine, prometryn and ametryn. Chapter 31

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