It is the opinion of practically all observers at Bombay that the recrudescence of the disease during the winter is due to this overcrowding.
Now the veil was torn aside, and the Mohammedans saw themselves menaced by a recrudescence of militant Hinduism like that which had shattered the Mogul Empire after the death of the Emperor Aurangzeb two hundred years before.
The years after 1911 witnessed a gradual recrudescenceof discontent as the first effect of the Councils Act wore off and the sense of unfulfilled aspiration sharpened the appetite for more.
As a rule, after a time the nodes cease to grow, and then a period of remission sets in that lasts for many years and there may be no recrudescence of the affection.
Despite that drift, there are indications of a racial recrudescencethrough the half-castes, a tendency noticed by students of the primitive peoples throughout the Pacific.
Perhaps it was the recrudescenceof intolerance which marked the early settlers in the East.
There is the recrudescence of hyphenated Americanism which we thought to have been stamped out when we committed the Nation, life and soul, to the World War.
If the great civilized nations of the present day should completely disarm, the result would mean an immediate recrudescence of barbarism in one form or another.
On the outbreak of war there were reports of a recrudescence of native trouble, which was attributed to German intrigue.
This recrudescence of woe after the clear calm of a moment is only too well known to us all in our sorrows.
Chart showing recrudescence of fever from indiscretion of diet.
This susceptibility, however, is less a systemic tendency to the development of the disease than a peculiar liability to recrudescence originated by chronic local ailments.
A relapse or recrudescence of the rash may be looked for at this time.
The promptness of the reply to this indicated that the recrudescence of Peter Moore, dead or alive, was of sufficient interest to command the presence of the gunboat's commander in the wireless house.
It is very difficult, with the milder notions which we have learnt from the spirit of the Gospel, to look with approval on the recrudescence of the Elijah-spirit displayed by the last proceeding.
This was a recrudescence of the old craze for occultism, which now spread like wildfire all over Europe from Bordeaux to St. Petersburg.
It is curious to notice that the eighties of the last century were marked by a simultaneous recrudescence of secret societies and of Socialist organizations.
Enlightenment was only to come after a recrudescence of madness and by the mutual slaughter of a fresh crop of illusions, usurpations, and tyrannies.
This is perhaps the secret of that strange recrudescence of national feeling, apart often from political divisions, which has closely followed the French Revolution and the industrial era.
These mental images are the recrudescence or recurrence of perceptions.
She exhibits a survival or recrudescence of savage phenomena, real or feigned, of convulsion and of secondary personality, and entertains a survival of the animistic explanation.
This recrudescence of persecution, this fresh outpouring of the blood of martyrs, served to further enliven the roots which that holy Sapling had already struck in its native soil.
The renewed activity of the Inquisition, in the early eighteenth century, seems to have been accompanied with a recrudescence of severity in these cases.
With the recrudescence of persecution in the first half of the eighteenth century, there was greater severity--irremissible prison and sanbenito for life and, in a Barcelona case of 1723, a woman had two hundred lashes in addition.
Late Rickets# or #Rachitis Adolescentium# is met with at any age from nine to seventeen, and is generally believed to be due to a recrudescence of rickets which had been present in childhood.