12 collocations for recant

If thou canst Perswade thy husband to recant his errours, He shall not onely live, but in our favoures Be chiefe.

His hatred to those powers to which we bow, On whom we all depend, he has kneel'd to them; Let him his base Apostacy recant, Recant his being a Christian, and recant The love he beares to Christians.

And, rather than he would recant Th' opinion, suffered banishment.

I have had a letter from Lloyd; the young metaphysician of Caius is well, and is busy recanting the new heresy, metaphysics, for the old dogma Greek.

Mr. Asquith has handsomely recanted his hostility to women's suffrage, admitting that by their splendid services in the war women have worked out their own electoral salvation.

your superannuated bards ever recant the indiscretions of their nonage.

North, , pirate, commands the Pelican; recants his submission to Warren; is killed by natives of St. Mary's.

If not, by what right could he expect OEcolampadius or Zuinglius to recant their convictions respecting the Eucharist, or the Baptists theirs on Infant Baptism, to the same authority?

I'll reconcile myself to Musgrave's love: I will recant my false suspicion, And humbly make my true submission.

Six several times was he induced to recant the doctrines he had preached, and profess an allegiance which could only be a solemn mockery.

Supported by the friendship of Rochester, and most of the Tory nobles who were active in the Revolution, of Leicester, and many Whigs, and especially of the Lord-Chamberlain Dorset, there would probably have been little difficulty in his remaining poet-laureate, if he had recanted the errors of Popery.

He had not denied his master, like Peter; he had not recanted the faith like Cranmer; he had simply yielded for fear of bodily torments, and therefore was not sincere in the abjuration which he made to save his life.

12 collocations for  recant