recrudesce — index recur, relapse Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
recrudesce — (v.) 1875, back formation from recrudescence, or else from L. recrudescere, from re (see RE (Cf. re )) + crudescere, from crudus raw (see CRUDE (Cf. crude)). Related: Recrudesced; recrudescing … Etymology dictionary
recrudesce — *return, revert, recur Analogous words: *renew, renovate, refurbish Contrasted words: *suppress, repress: *stop, cease, discontinue … New Dictionary of Synonyms
recrudesce — [rē΄kro͞o des′] vi. recrudesced, recrudescing [L recrudescere < re , again + crudescere, to become harsh or raw < crudus, raw, CRUDE] to break out again after a period of latency or relative inactivity; become active again, as a disease… … English World dictionary
recrudesce — intransitive verb ( desced; descing) Etymology: Latin recrudescere to become raw again, from re + crudescere to become raw, from crudus raw more at raw Date: 1884 to break out or become active again … New Collegiate Dictionary
recrudesce — /ree krooh des /, v.i., recrudesced, recrudescing. to break out afresh, as a sore, a disease, or anything else that has been quiescent. [1880 85; < L recrudescere to become raw again, equiv. to re RE + crudescere to grow harsh, worse (crud(us)… … Universalium
recrudesce — verb to recur, or break out anew after a dormant period … Wiktionary
recrudesce — re·cru·desce .rē krü des vi, desced; desc·ing to break out or become active again <the epidemic recrudesced after a period of quiescence> … Medical dictionary
recrudesce — (Roget s Thesaurus II) verb To come back to a former condition: recur, reoccur, return, revert. See REPETITION … English dictionary for students
recrudesce — re·cru·desce || ‚rɪËkruË des v. break out again, erupt again, reappear (disease) … English contemporary dictionary