Recur Sentence Examples

recur
  • Also the variations recur with perfect regularity.

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  • The headache lasts from 15 minutes to four hours and may recur several times in a day.

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  • However, allergic conjunctivitis will likely recur if the individual again comes into contact with the particular allergen.

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  • Again, all accounts of diphtheria show a tendency on the part of the disease to recur in the same districts year after year.

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  • Floor slabs may be regarded as wide and shallow beams, and the remarks made about the stresses in the one apply to the other also; accordingly, the various devices which are used for strengthening beams recur in the slabs.

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  • The company cited a " coincidental " series of events it said are unlikely to recur.

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  • At Winsford, where the same formation seems to recur, it is 159 yds.

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  • Second, the types of problems encountered tend to recur.

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  • Hyperthyroidism may recur in patients previously treated for Graves ' disease.

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  • If apnea is diagnosed, it will probably recur, but most premature babies outgrow the condition by the time they reach their normal due date.

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  • Mastoiditis is curable with treatment but may be hard to treat and may recur.

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  • If the dermatitis is mild, responds well to treatment, and does not recur, ordinarily the investigation is at an end.

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  • The variations of the gaps between " spot " and " present month futures " are somewhat mysterious, a matter to which we shall recur.

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  • The black sails recur in the modern Greek version of the tale of Theseus.

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  • Many of these stars seem to vary quite irregularly; the changes of magnitude do not recur in any orderly way.

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  • Yet the substance, quality, condition absolute (7rws gxov) and condition relative of Stoicism have no enduring influence outside the school, though they recur with eclectics like Galen.

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  • The political situation in Athens, however, at this time was as exceptional as the French Revolution, and offered an opportunity not likely to recur for the adoption of a system in widely extended use which private individuals had been employing for a long time.

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  • When it is used to relieve pain or diarrhoea, if the dose be not taken at the usual time the symptoms of the disease recur with such violence that the remedy is speedily resorted to as the only means of relief, and thus the habit is exceedingly difficult to break off.

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  • If the denominator of the fraction, when it is in its lowest terms, contains any other prime factors than 2 and 5, it cannot be expressed exactly as a decimal; but after a certain point a definite series of figures will constantly recur.

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  • To this point we shall recur; palaeontology, though it suggests a clue, does not furnish an actual link either between Echinoidea and Asteroidea, or between those classes and Pelmatozoa.

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  • Causes of They were bound to recur as long as the kings who the ruled on this side of the Channel were possessed of Hundred continental dominions, which lay as near, or nearer, to their hearts than their insular realm.

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  • Quite 90% of these cases are seen too late for operation, and nearly all recur after operation.

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  • Names related to those of Edomite and kindred groups are found in the late genealogies of both Judah and Benjamin, and recur even among families of the time of Nehemiah.

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  • Similar situations recur in the reigns of Ahaz and Jehoram.

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  • The same morbid and abnormal trance utterances recur in Christian revivals in every age, e.g.

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  • It is noteworthy, also, that an Ahaziah and a Jehoram appear as kings of Israel, and (in the reverse order) of Judah, and somewhat similar incidents recur in the now separate histories of the two kingdoms. The most striking is a great revolt in south Palestine.

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  • Not to recur again to his labours, it may be said here that between 1821 and 1828 he published at Winchester, in eleven volumes, an enlarged edition of his original work, entitling it A General History of Birds; but his defects as a compiler, which had been manifest before, rather increased with age, and the consequences were not happy.'

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  • These Ionian newcomers are almost certainly responsible for the absorption of the numerous independent communities of Attica into a central state of Athens under a powerful monarchy (see Theseus), for the introduction of new cults, and for the division of the people into four tribes whose names - Geleontes, Hopletes, Argadeis and Aegicoreis - recur in several true Ionian towns.

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  • Canon is concerned) of that theory of which examples recur in Judges, Samuel and Kings, and this treatment of history in accordance with religious or ethical doctrines finds its continuation in the didactic aims which characterize the later non-canonical writings (cf.

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  • Humanism, a word which will often recur in the ensuing paragraphs, denotes a specific bias which the forces liberated in the Renaissance took from contact with the ancient world, - the particular form assumed by human self-esteem at that epoch, - the ideal of life and civilization evolved by the modern nations.

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  • During the 5th century the Angli invaded this country (see Britain, AngloSaxon), after which time their name does not recur on the continent except in the title of the code mentioned above.

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  • It is not known whether symptoms will recur in the distant future.

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  • I willed that such an untoward incident should not recur.

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  • This heat period, or period of oestrus, lasts for about two days and may recur as often as every two to three weeks!

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  • As long as the balance of the card is sufficient, payments can recur every month or at whatever interval you set up.

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  • Approximately 88 percent of woman and 69 percent of men experience this type of headache at least once and their headaches may recur often.

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  • One theory of what causes dreams to recur is that the dream is caused by a certain life situation (either in the past or a current situation) which is unresolved for the dreamer.

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  • The dream will continue to recur as long as the dreamer has not resolved the situation represented in the dream.

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  • Often the nightmare will no recur if the dreamer has the opportunity to analyze, solve or deal with the issue which might be causing the nightmare.

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  • The good news is no dream is inherently wrong and many dreams can recur throughout a lifetime.

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  • It is slow growing, does not invade surrounding tissue, and once removed, does not usually recur.

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  • If the cancer cells have spread to surrounding tissue, even after the malignant tumor is removed, it will typically recur.

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  • Parents should notify their healthcare provider if their child develops symptoms atypical for their previously diagnosed condition or if those symptoms get worse or recur with infection.

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  • Moles are rarely cancerous and, once removed, unlikely to recur.

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  • Although spasmodic croup is associated with the same viruses that cause viral croup, spasmodic croup tends to recur and may be an indication of some type of allergic reaction instead of a direct infection.

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  • Benign brain tumors rarely recur, but sarcomas can reappear after treatment was believed to have eliminated every cell.

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  • They also seem to recur in children with lowered immune resistance such as children with diabetes.

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  • The hereditary anemias, such as the thalassemias and sickle cell anemia, may require life-long treatment and monitoring whereas other types of anemia, once treated, are apt not to recur.

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  • If the symptoms of overuse persist beyond a few days of rest or if they recur, a physician should evaluate the athlete.

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  • However, it may recur in certain susceptible individuals.

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  • Oral herpes can recur as often as monthly or only one or two times each year.

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  • That ability explains why symptoms can recur in cycles and can flare up after months, years, or decades.

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  • However, symptoms can recur when the child reaches his or her thirties or forties.

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  • Torticollis is unlikely to recur if stretching and flexibility exercises for the neck are continued.

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  • If nosebleeds recur within that time, it is recommended to take 500 mg of bioflavonoids twice a day.

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  • Untreated, petit mal seizures can recur as many as 100 times a day and may progress to grand mal seizures.

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  • Season ten is the final season for the long-running superhero drama and Keri Lynn will recur throughout the season.

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  • These rashes can usually be cured with over-the-counter or prescription antifungal cream, although they may recur.

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  • Without proper treatment, fungus infections advance and often recur.

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  • Some individuals suffer for years without complete success, due to the condition's tendency to recur over time.

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  • Such frost-cracks, sun-cracks, &c., may then be slowly healed over by callus, but if the conditions for necrosis recur the crack may be again opened, or if Fungi, &c., interfere with occlusion, the healing is prevented; in such cases the local necrosis may give rise to cankers.

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  • Again we must recur to that indefatigable and most original investigator Nitzsch, who, having never intermitted his study of the particular subject of his first contribution to Nitzsch.

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  • Isolated enterprises somewhat of the character of a Crusade, but hardly serious enough to be dignified by that name, recur during the 14th century.

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  • The same linguistic criteria recur, and the interest in lists and genealogies, in priests and Levites, and in the temple service point unmistakably to the presence of the same hand (the so-called "chronicler") in ChroniclesEzra-Nehemiah.

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  • The natural resources of Guatemala are rich but undeveloped; and the capital necessary for their development is not easily obtained in a country where war, revolution and economic crises recur at frequent intervals, where the premium on gold has varied by no less than 500% in a single year, and where many of the wealthiest cities and agricultural districts have been destroyed by earthquake in one day (18th of April 1902).

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  • In The Julian Calendar The Dominical Letters Are Readily Found By Means Of A Short Cycle, In Which They Recur In The Same Order Without Interruption.

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  • Famines seem to recur in India at periodical intervals, which have been held to be in some way dependent on the sun-spot period.

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  • It combines amid diverse material a hero of Bethlehem and rival of Saul with the idea of a conqueror of this district; it introduces peculiar traditions of the ark and sanctuary, and it associates David with Hebron, Calebites and the wilderness of Paran 3 The books of Samuel and Kings have become, in process of compilation, the natural sequel to the preceding books, but the conflicting features and the perplexing differences of standpoint recur elsewhere, and the relationship between them suggests that similar causes have been operative upon the compilation.

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  • If b 2 /a 2, 3 /a 3 ..., the component fractions, as they are called, recur, either from the commencement or from some fixed term, the continued fraction is said to be recurring or periodic. It is obvious that every terminating continued fraction reduces to a commensurable number.

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  • In the Avesta all these recur ad nauseam, so much so that the primitive spirit of the religion is stifled beneath them, as the doctrine of the ancient prophets was stifled in Judaism and the Talmud.

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  • It may recur periodically, or, as is more common, at irregular intervals.

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  • The phenomena of life and growth and assimilation have not been satisfactorily explained as mechanical modes of motion, and the fact that identical cerebral movements have not been discovered to recur makes scientific and accurate prediction of future cerebral changes an impossibility.

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  • In the line of mythical ancestors which extends without interruption up to Noah, the names of Fenius Farsaid, Goedel Glas, Eber Scot and Breogan constantly recur in Irish story.

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  • There are key themes which recur throughout this book, Polish history, literary adaptations and Freudian interpretations.

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  • If a child has had croup before, it tends to recur when they have a cold.

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  • Even if paradoxical embolism was the cause of the initial event, as patients age strokes may recur for other reasons.

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  • This being so, it is absurd in a symphony to use only such orchestral colours as would be fit for dramatic moments which are not likely to recur for an hour or two, if they recur at all.

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  • All that was going on before her now seemed quite natural, but on the other hand all her previous thoughts of her betrothed, of Princess Mary, or of life in the country did not once recur to her mind and were as if belonging to a remote past.

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