After-images or recrudescent memories coming up from the subconscious strata to which they had fallen. |
That Athens was effective in this respect is suggested by the evidence for recrudescent piracy in the early 4th century, when the Athenians no longer had the power to police the seas. |
For Levinas, Heidegger's philosophy was a thinking of the neuter, a recrudescent paganism that sacralized natural events and anonymous forces. |
This seems to be a recrudescent strain of the plague rather than a wholly new disease. |
In the event of recrudescent infections due to P. falciparum, or failure of chemoprophylaxis, patients should be treated with a different antimalarial. |
Ironically, it was when Russia was ruled by a Georgian — Stalin — that cruelty toward people of the Caucasus was most vehemently recrudescent. |