recur
suomi-englanti sanakirjarecur englannista suomeksi
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uusiutua
recur englanniksi
Of an event, situation, etc.: to appear or happen again, especially repeatedly.
(synonyms)
(ux)
(RQ:More Immortality of the Soul)
(RQ:Berkeley Alciphron)
(RQ:Scott Waverley)
(RQ:Nietzsche Tille Zarathustra)
(RQ:Maugham Of Human Bondage)
(RQ:Lawrence Lost Girl)
(quote-book)
Of a disease or symptom: to happen again, especially repeatedly or after a remission or an apparent recovery.
(RQ:R. Hall Well of Loneliness) The oculist had warned him that the trouble might recur, that he ought to have remained under observation. Well, it had recurred about four months ago.
(RQ:Fuller Abel Redevivus)
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) John Field for Timothy Garthwait|page=101|pageurl=https://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo/A61109.0001.001/1:3.6?rgn=div2;view=fulltext|oclc=1224708021|passage=(..) ''Men that are of a talkative and melancholy temper see any kind of visions.'' And this, especially because they have so deep a resentment (quote-gloss) of the most affecting objects, whose images therefore recur to the fancy when they are asleep, in most distinct and lively figures.
(RQ:Locke Malebranche)
(RQ:Young Revenge). Carry you Goodneſs then to ſuch Extreme, / So blinded to the Faults of him you love, / That you perceive not he is jealous? / ''Leon''(quote-gloss). Heav'ns! / And yet a Thouſand Things recur that ſvvear it.
(RQ:Fielding Tom Jones)
(RQ:Johnson Rambler)
(RQ:Austen Pride and Prejudice)
(quote-book)|page=42|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=vpr-Z-fIeJUC&pg=PA42|oclc=13357584|passage=When thou, departed vision! dear and bright, / Recurrest to mine eyes—and with old lays, / Such as thou sangs't me in our innocent days, / Bringest, in vivid power, the moments past; (..)
(RQ:Charlotte Bronte Jane Eyre) I had half-forgotten my own wretched position: now it recurred to me.
(RQ:Tennyson Maud)
(RQ:Carroll Snark)
(RQ:Conrad Lord Jim)
(RQ:Brittain Testament of Youth)'s return to France, I had the first of those dreams which were to recur, in slightly different variations, at frequent intervals for nearly ten years.
(quote-book) Almost all had been undistorted memories of his childhood, memories never once recalled before.
To speak, think, or write about something again; to back or return to a memory, a subject, etc.
(RQ:More Philosophical Writings)
(RQ:Richardson Grandison)
(RQ:Austen Emma)
(RQ:Mary Shelley Frankenstein)
(RQ:James Golden Bowl)
''Followed by'' to'', or'' on ''or'' upon: to have recourse to someone or something for assistance, support, etc.; to appeal, to resort, to to.
(RQ:Burnet Church of England)&93;|chapter=XXII. The Second Part of a Long Dispatch of the Cardinals Concerning the Divorce. An Original.|page=51|passage=If his Grace vvere minded, or vvould intend to do a thing inique or injuſt, there vvere no need to recurr unto the Pope's Holineſe for doing thereof.
(quote-book)|location=France|publisher=(...) Bellet|page=29|pageurl=https://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo2/A12485.0001.001/1:7.4?rgn=div2;view=fulltext|oclc=80344374|passage=And surely here I admire the goodnes of in Christianity|God towards our Nation, that he would Saint Austin (quote-gloss) should enquire such small matters of S. Gregory I|Gregory, and that his questions should remaine to our dayes, both to shew vs by our first Apostle what account we should make of the resolution of the 2|Sea Apostolick, and (..) ''in all difficulties recur to her'', (..)
(RQ:Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica)|page=274|passage=Others have been ſo blind in deducing the originall of things, or delivering their ovvne beginnings, that vvhen it hath fallen into controverſie they have not recurred unto Chronologie or the records of time, but betaken themſelves unto probabilities, and the conjecturalities of Philoſophy.
(RQ:Locke Human Understanding) of the Schools, I ſuppoſe they vvill thereby very little mend the matter, or help us to a more clear and poſitive ''Idea'' of infinite Duration, there being nothing more inconceivable to me, than Duration vvithout Succeſſion.
(quote-book) II. The History of Subordination.|title=An Essay on the History of Civil Society|location=Dublin|publisher=(...) Boulter Grierson,(nb...)|section=3rd part (Of the History of Policy and Arts)|pages=181–182|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=wDhcAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA181|oclc=1205124443|passage=The barbarian (..) acts from affections unacquainted vvith forms; and vvhen provoked, or vvhen engaged in diſputes, he recurs to the ſvvord, as the ultimate means of deciſion, in all queſtions of right.
(quote-book)|location=Edinburgh|publisher=John Anderson,(nb...); Bell & Bradfute,(nb...); and Saunders & Benning,(nb...)|page=827|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=rptIAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA827|oclc=635945886|passage=RECOURSE; is the right competent to an assignee or disponee, under the warrandice of the transaction, to recur on the vendor or cedent for relief, in case of eviction or of defects inferring warrandice.
(RQ:Craddock Stranger People's Country)
(RQ:James Ambassadors) had found the place, even in company, such a refuge from the obsession of his problem that, with renewed pressure from that source, he had not unnaturally recurred to a remedy that seemed so, for the moment, to meet his case.
(synonym of)
''Often in the form'' recurring ''following a number'': of a numeral or group of numerals in a fraction: to repeat indefinitely.
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) Whittingham|Whittingham and Rowland,(nb...); for Robinson (bookseller)|George and S. Robinson,(nb...)|column=1|section=signature M2, recto|sectionurl=https://archive.org/details/newmathematicalp00barluoft/page/n186/mode/1up|oclc=813491578|passage=CIRCULATING ''Decimals'', or ''Recurring Decimals'', are those that consist of a repetition of a small number of digits, as 646464, &c. 4127127127, &c.; in fact, every decimal that is not finite, is a circulating decimal, or is such, that if continued far enough, the same figures will again recur; but it is only those, of which the periods of circulation consist of a few figures, that receive generally the definition of circulating decimals.
''Followed by'' into ''or'' to: to go to a place again; to return.
(RQ:Cervantes Shelton Don Quixote)
(RQ:New World of English Words)
(RQ:Waterhouse Fire), (..)
(RQ:Goldsmith Citizen of the World)
''Followed by'' into ''or'' to: To back to doing an activity, or to using a thing; to return.
(RQ:Stedman Surinam)
(RQ:Eliot Adam Bede)
(RQ:Eliot Middlemarch)
''Followed by'' to: to go to a place; to resort.
(RQ:Stanley History of Philosophy)|chapter=VI|chaptername=His Lawes|page=44|passage=The City grevv very populous, many recurring thither from all parts of ''Attica'', for liberty and ſecurity, (..)
''Followed by'' from: to move or run back from something; to recede, to withdraw.
(quote-book) I. Of the Motion of an Elastic Fibre.|title=An Enquiry into the Principal Phænomena of Sounds and Musical Strings|location=Dublin|publisher=(...) Joseph Hill,(nb...)|section=part II (On Musical Strings)|page=76|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=IVkUAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA76|oclc=1326245130|passage=If half the latitude of the firſt vvave be an aliquant part of the ſtring, after the motion has been propagated to the fartheſt extremity, there vvill be a nevv ſeries of leſs vvaves, recurring in a contrary direction.