释义 |
resurgence|rɪˈsɜːdʒəns| [See resurgent and -ence.] 1. The act of rising again. Also fig.
a1834Coleridge in Lit. Rem. (1836) II. 153 That happy, humble, ducking under, yet constant resurgence against, the check of her superiors! 1863Geo. Eliot Romola xxxviii, The events of the night all came back to him:..the crowding resurgence of facts and names. 1886Symonds Renaiss. It., Cath. React. (1898) I. i. 40 The resurgence of popular literature and the creation of popular theatrical types deserve to be..noticed. 2. The fissure through which a stream re-emerges at the end of an underground part of its course; the re-emergence of such a stream. [This sense results from the adoption of F. résurgence (cf. A. Vandel 1920, in Bull. de la Soc. zool. de France XLV. 46).]
1954W. D. Thornbury Princ. Geomorphol. xiii. 327 The terms rise and resurgence have been applied to the reappearance of surface waters which have been diverted to underground routes. 1963D. W. & E. E. Humphries tr. Termier's Erosion & Sedimentation xiv. 303 Sometimes the surface water plunges down into the underground system by way of a sink hole... The river, however, retains its individuality and may return to the surface through a resurgence or spring. 1965Geogr. Jrnl. CXXXI. 37 This subterranean stream maintains a constant flow during all weather conditions, and is joined by a small seepage resurgence and streamlet within a large bedding plane cave..through which it flows to the main resurgence. 1971J. N. Jennings Karst v. 74 A useful distinction can be made between exsurgences fed entirely by seepage waters from the karst and resurgences supplied by the sinking of surface streams. So reˈsurgency. rare—1.
a1834Coleridge Aids Refl. App. C (1858) I. 403 The perpetual reconciliation, and as perpetual resurgency of the primary contradiction. |