31 Verbs to Use for the Word recurrences

This will, at least, prevent a recurrence of the danger I ran last night.

In the meantime, in the hope of avoiding a recurrence of so distressing a calamity, the colonists ploughed over the whole surface of their cemetery, and sowed it with corn; thus concealing what was to them so sacred from the eyes of their wild and ruthless foes.

At this time, on the other hand, they were executing in person or beholding or at least understanding thoroughly by fresh descriptions merely deeds that had been dared before; in the intervals, expecting a recurrence of similar acts, some were inventing various new methods to employ, and others were becoming afflicted by new fears that they too should suffer.

He had felt for the moment a recurrence of the old jealousy.

They found the points of the compass by determining the recurrence of the equinoxes and solstices; but they had no conception of the ecliptic,of that great circle in the heaven formed by the sun's annual course,and of its obliquity when compared with our equator.

I confess that till the light of the twofoldness of the Christian Church dawned on my mind, the study of the history and literature of the Church during the first three or four centuries infected me with a spirit of doubt and disgust which required a frequent recurrence to the writings of John and Paul to preserve me whole in the Faith.

The return of the summer heats bringing on a recurrence of the malady acquired at Athens, I was obliged to leave Italy for the summer and I returned to England.

Our system fortunately contemplates a recurrence to first principles, differing in this respect from all that have preceded it, and securing it, I trust, equally against the decay and the commotions which have marked the progress of other governments.

He finished the flask to cure a recurrence of the shudders.

One of our longest, as it is one of our most beautiful poems, the Faerie Queene, is written in a stanza which demands the continual recurrence of an equal number of rhymes; and the chief objection to our adopting the sonnet is the paucity of our rhymes.

Probably she dares not give way to unbounded hope, remembering the bitterness of her former trial, and dreading its recurrence.

This does not exclude the recurrence of these three stages within each artin architecture, for example, as monumental (the obelisk), useful (house and temple), and Gothic (the cathedral) architecture.

She had somehow experienced a recurrence of that peculiar feeling of needing to be on her guard, as if there were some curious, latent antagonism between them.

The Teniente dismounted, evidently with the intention of joining us, but soon got back again into his saddle,having experienced, as H. explained, "a sudden recurrence of palpitation.

According to this punctuation, the words of Rome, as well as her sky and other beautiful endowments, are too weak to declare at full the glory which they impart; and the inference from this rather abruptly introduced recurrence to Rome is (I suppose), that the spiritual glory faintly adumbrated by Rome can only be realised in that realm of eternity to which death gives access.

On subsequent battle-fields I have never known their recurrence.

Further, we may notice the recurrence of the letter V on a black device, and there is a second curious black tablet, which, however, has nothing on it.

no doubtthat it was in contemplation of such circumstances possibly occurring in our time, that the statesmen of Europe, some thirteen years ago, knowing that it was probable that the royal line of Denmark would cease, and that upon the death of the then king, his dominions would be divided, and in all probability disputed, gave their best consideration to obviate the recurrence of such calamities to Europe.

Nerva, on hearing this, prohibited the future recurrence of such scenes.

I have regretted the frequent recurrence of my own name in the correspondence, and have suppressed several letters of my own which could be spared, without rendering less intelligible the communications of the other parties, to whom the interest and merit of the transaction belong.

A note from Evans stated a recurrence of the old trouble.

'MY DEAR KEATS, 'I hear with great pain the dangerous accident you have undergone [recurrence of blood-spitting from the lungs], and Mr. Gisborne, who gives me the account of it, adds that you continue to wear a consumptive appearance.

I feel quite ashamed of the measure of his success with me; but surely we want a new sanctification every day,a new recurrence to the grace that will set "all dislocated bones," as J. Fletcher calls unsanctified feelings and affections.

The weak and designing, and all who wait for the war to achieve a constitutional recurrence of our national malady, will use it again to defeat the great act of justice and the people's great necessity.

It witnessed a recurrence to that which cannot but be regarded as among the most important privileges of the House of Commons, the right of impeaching a minister for maladministration.

31 Verbs to Use for the Word  recurrences