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recrudesce

VERB
  1. become raw or open
    Such boils tend to recrudesce
    He broke out in hives
    My skin breaks out when I eat strawberries
  2. happen
    Report the news as it develops
    These political movements recrudesce from time to time

How To Use recrudesce In A Sentence

  • Strange to say, the gale, after easing to a mild breeze, recrudesced in a sort of after-clap. CHAPTER XLVI
  • Remained Balatta, who, from the time she found him and poked his blue eyes open to recrudescence of her grotesque female hideousness, had continued his adorer. THE RED ONE
  • the patient presented with a case of recrudescent gastralgia
  • Many times, in the jacket, has Adam Strang recrudesced, but always he springs into being full-statured, heavy-thewed, a full thirty years of age. Chapter 15
  • That phrase, learned in boyhood from my Marryatt and Cooper, recrudesced in my brain. CHAPTER XLII
  • A high rate of repopulation of skin with microfilariae will allow parasite transmission, possibly with ivermectin-resistant O. volvulus which could eventually lead to recrudescence of the disease. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • France; its object was to prevent by higher theological studies a recrudescence of Albigensianism. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
  • Did her frank comradeliness with Grandison token merely frank comradeliness and childhood contacts continued and recrudesced into adult years? or did it hide, in woman's subtler and more secretive ways, a beat of heart and return of feeling that might even out-balance what Sonny's face advertised? THE KANAKA SURF
  • The old long sickness, which had been purely an intellectual sickness, recrudesced. Chapter 35
  • So either the usage has recrudesced or the verb vanished only from formal written prose, not from the spoken language.
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