936 examples of recurs in sentences

In these Psalms, 148, 149, 150, the word Laudate recurs several times.

Whenever vertigo recurs frequently, and at an advanced period of life; and more particularly when it is accompanied with drowsiness; weakness of the voluntary muscles; impaired memory, or judgment; or, in short, any other disturbance or imperfection in the state of the sensorial functions; an unfavourable result is to be expected; because all these afford decisive evidence of a considerable degree and extent of disease in the brainDr.

And sometimes he symbolically announces their ineffable idioms, but at other times he recurs to them from images, and discovers in them the primary causes of wholes.

This may in many cases be due to the action of some hardly perceptible odor, which accompanied those scenes and now recurs exactly same as before.

My wife (as I have often said, because it so often recurs to my thoughts) to be so much my superior!

"In time, some particular train of ideas fixes the attention; all other intellectual gratifications are rejected; the mind, in weariness or leisure, recurs constantly to the favourite conception, and feasts on the luscious falsehood, whenever she is offended with the bitterness of truth.

In the Mexican calendar this recurs only once in their cycle of fifty-two years.

The Constitution binds us all, North and South: then recurs the question, What is the meaning of its provisions?

It is not a play, to begin with, and therefore does not withdraw the mind from its daily cares; the anxious man recurs to his problems on the way; and each mile, in that case, brings fresh weariness to brain as well as body.

he-e-e!how he laughs when he recurs to those days of the long, long ago, with their miserable little swindles, no better than farthing candles, (allowable rhyme,) and their puny dodges devised for flagellating LUCIFER round a stump.

This bed recurs eternally in mediæval tales.

" "But, after all that can be said against war, and after the fullest admission of its folly, cruelty, and wickedness, still the question recurs, how can it be prevented?

One feels most for the sheep and lambs, when the softened fancy recurs to the streams and hedgerows, and pleasant pastures, from whence the woolly exiles have been ejected; and yet the emotion of pity isnot wholly unaccompanied by admiration at the sagacity of the canine disciplinarians that bay them remorselessly forward, and sternly refuse the stragglers permission to make a reconnoissance on the road.

All that I have ever heard about this famous pirate recurs to mehis existence when he skimmed the Southern Seas, the useless expeditions organized by the maritime powers to hunt him down.

The bitter fruits of the original seed appear, and the sad question recurs, whether women ought ever to have tasted of the alphabet.

However often he assures himself that the great realities are on his side, and that the busy people round him are concerned only with fleeting appearances, yet the feeling constantly recurs to him that it is he himself who is living in a world of shadows.

It recurs in the prophets: "I, the Lord, am he that blotteth out thy sins; yea, tho they be as a thick cloud, I will blot them out."

The note of doubt in the opening section of 30 is closely akin to that which recurs in the book of Ecclesiastes.

The character of Herod is comparatively easy to understand, for it is elemental and one that constantly recurs in history.

The question recurs.

The pleasure of recollecting speculative notions would not be much less than that of gaining them, if they could be kept pure and unmingled with the passages of life; but such is the necessary concatenation of our thoughts, that good and evil are linked together, and no pleasure recurs but associated with pain.

But to establish their principle, they make their definition and verification of a miracle so strict, as would have amazed the apostles; and after all, the difficulty recurs, that miraculous phenomena will never prove the goodness and veracity of God, if we do not know these qualities in Him without miracle.

Here he reposed after those battles in which he laid the foundation of his future glory, and to which, after long experience, and so many subsequent triumphs as almost to eclipse their splendour, he recurs with peculiar satisfaction.

Surely it must not be so;and the question recurs, on what are we to rest our authority when the State deserts us? Christ has not left His Church without claim of its own upon the attention of men.

Nay, even in the mass itself thy comely face appears, and our affectionate intercourse recurs to me.

936 examples of  recurs  in sentences