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单词 recurrent
释义

recurrentadj.n.1

Brit. /rᵻˈkʌrənt/, /rᵻˈkʌrn̩t/, U.S. /rəˈkərənt/, /riˈkərənt/
Forms: 1500s– recurrent, 1600s recurrant.
Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin recurrent-, recurrēns.
Etymology: < classical Latin recurrent-, recurrēns present participle of recurrere recur v. Compare Middle French, French récurrent (1555 in anatomical use; 1713 in mathematical use), Spanish recurrente (c1500), Italian ricorrente (a1622). Compare earlier recurring adj.In recurrent sensibility at sense A. 1b after French sensibilité récurrente (F. Magendie 1847, in Comptes rendus hebd. de l'Acad. des Sci. 24 1131). With sense A. 2a and A. 2b compare slightly earlier recurrence n. In sense A. 2c after French récurrent (1801 in Haüy). In sense A. 3b after post-classical Latin recurrentes versus ( Sidonius Epistles 9. 14 (5th cent.)).
A. adj.
1.
a. Anatomy and Biology. Of a nerve, blood vessel, or other anatomical structure, or the course of such a structure: that reverses direction; that turns back upon itself; spec. (esp. in recurrent nerve, recurrent laryngeal nerve) designating a branch of the vagus nerve that curves under a large artery (the right subclavian artery in the case of the right nerve, the aortic arch in the case of the left) before ascending to innervate the larynx.Frequently postpositive in early use.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > growth, movement, or curvature of parts > [adjective] > in a particular direction
recurrent1578
acroscopic1868
basipetal1869
basifugal1875
basiscopic1882
the world > life > the body > vascular system > blood vessel > [adjective] > others
recurrent1578
subserous1827
unipolar1862
the world > life > the body > nervous system > nerve > types of nerves > [adjective]
motive?a1425
recurrent1578
motory1683
refluent1741
abducent1752
motorial1768
internuncial1821
motor1823
centrifugal1828
unfilamentous1828
masticatory1834
aesthesodic1859
incito-motor1865
vaso-motor1865
kinesodic1874
centripetal1877
vaso-motorial1877
incito-motory1884
augmentor1885
pilomotor1891
postfixed1892
postganglionic1892
precellular1892
prefixed1892
preganglionic1892
plurisegmental1898
nocifensor1936
the world > life > the body > nervous system > nerve > specific nerves > [noun] > pairs of cranial nerves > specific cranial nerves
optic sinew?c1425
recurrent nerve1578
optic1615
optic nerve1615
recurrent1615
par vagum1666
fourth nerve1681
accessory nerve1682
chorda tympani1807
abducens1809
hypoglossus1811
pneumogastric1826
pneumogastric nerve1827
hypoglossal nerve1828
facial1834
fifth nerve1836–9
vagus1840
vagal nerve1854
vagus nerve1856
Jacobson's nerve1860
oculomotor1868
trigeminus1875
hypoglossal1876
oculimotor1890
pathetic1890
sixth1899
trigeminal1899
1578 J. Banister Hist. Man i. f. 11v As though betwene the Incissorie, and Dogge teeth, were some interceptiue Seame recurrent.
1578 J. Banister Hist. Man viii. f. 105 v And this is the true & brief description of the right recurrent, or reuersiue Nerue.
1597 P. Lowe Whole Course Chirurg. v. xii. sig. N4 Those that are great, and neare the tracharter, are difficill in opening, by reason of the nerues recurrent which being cut, the sick waxeth dum.
1611 J. Florio Queen Anna's New World of Words Recorrenti vene, the veines called the recurrant veines.
1664 H. Power Exper. Philos. i. 68 That pleasant Experiment by tying the recurrent Nerves in a living Dogg.
1724 W. Stukeley Of Spleen 21 The first or par vagum is distributed to all the parts within the thorax, the lungs and heart, and by what they call the recurrent branch, to the wind-pipe and gullet.
1731 T. Lobb Treat. Smallpox i. 12 Abatement of these Swellings is not the Effect of any Return of the Humour inwards into the Blood again by any recurrent Vessels.
1775 J. Jenkinson Linnæus' Generic & Specific Descr. Brit. Plants Gloss. Recurrent, running backwards.
1830 J. Lindley Introd. Nat. Syst. Bot. 190 The corolla, whose tube has five nerves..dividing at top into recurrent branches.
1877 Gray's Anat. (ed. 8) 704 The tubes taking the course above described form a kind of loop, and are known as the looped or recurrent tubes of Henle.
1916 Amer. Jrnl. Anat. 19 451 Its most significant feature is the description of recurrent bronchi..growing from the air-sacs into the lungs and anastomosing with the parabronchi.
1947 A. D. Imms Outl. Entomol. (ed. 3) ii. 29 This ganglion is joined by bilateral connectives..to the tritocerebrum and gives off a recurrent nerve.
1954 Times 3 July 11/9 Both her recurrent laryngeal nerves were damaged.
1993 Plastic & Reconstructive Surg. 92 1137 This plexus is also fed by communicating branches from the radial recurrent artery.
b. Physiology. Of or relating to sensation (esp. of pain) associated with the ventral (chiefly motor) root of a spinal nerve, originally attributed to recurrent fibres from the dorsal root; esp. in recurrent sensibility. Now historical.
ΚΠ
1847 Lancet 13 July 132/1 M. Magendie communicated a note on Recurrent Sensibility.
1873 A. Flint Nerv. Syst. ii. 82 The sensibility of the anterior root is recurrent, being derived from the posterior root through the periphery.
1946 Jrnl. Hist. Med. 1 182 His [sc. Magendie's] experiment on recurrent sensibility gave rise to another contest with Longet.
1983 Science 25 Nov. 934 There are many sensory fibers in ventral roots... This..provides an explanation for the clinical phenomenon of recurrent sensibility.
1997 Progress in Neurobiol. 51 92/2 The pain reaction reflecting recurrent sensibility was relieved by section of the corresponding dorsal root.
2.
a. Occurring again, esp. regularly.
ΚΠ
1629 L. Andrewes XCVI. Serm. v. 223 It is a yearely recurrent fast.
1662 P. Gunning Paschal or Lent-Fast (Appendix) x. 539 Speaking of the yearly recurrent fast of Lent.
1701 tr. N. Andry Acct. Breeding Worms in Human Bodies v. 120 In some their Eyes are of the colour of Blood, a Pulse unequal and recurrent.
1776 A. Wilson Med. Res. Hysterics x. 99 The persons most susceptible of the attacks of this disease, are generally such as have the apperance of the greatest health..in such constitutions, it frequently becomes recurrent and habitual.
1850 J. S. Blackie tr. Æschylus Lyrical Dramas I. 47 From time to time In children's children recurrent appears The ancestral crime.
1860 J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps ii. xxvi. 368 The bands must be due to some regularly recurrent cause.
1920 Act 10 & 11 George V c. 67 §21 (1) To impose any tax, whether recurrent or non-recurrent, of the nature of a general tax upon capital.
2007 Times (Nexis) 15 Nov. 38 The three-day strike by freight train drivers..is part of their recurrent demand for exceptional pay rises.
b. Medicine. Of a disease, symptom, or condition: occurring again, esp. repeatedly or periodically; reappearing after remission or apparent cure.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > frequency > [adjective] > repeated or recurring
recurring1511
repeated1577
reiterated1592
round1620
recurrent1666
tautological1677
recurrable1846
1666 G. Harvey Morbus Anglicus xiv. 72 Short intermittent, or swift recurrent pains do precipitate patients into Consumptions.
1724 J. Maubray Female Physician xxviii. 111 If the number of recurrent paroxysms be summed up, they will exactly amount to the aforesaid 336 Hours.
1768 G. Fordyce Elements Pract. Physic: Pt. II (ed. 2) 5 Recurrent Fevers, consisting of more than one period, no single one lasting more than twenty-four hours.
1852 J. Paget Lect. Surg. Pathol. ii. 155 I have proposed the name of Recurrent Fibroid tumour.
1893 A. S. Eccles Sciatica 82 Six patients have suffered from recurrent sciatica after periods varying from six months to four years.
1967 Amer. Jrnl. Surg. 114 563/1 The clinical course of three patients with recurrent primary brain tumors has not been altered by intra-arterial chemotherapy.
1991 Atlantic Aug. 85/2 Barney began to suffer from anxiety, insomnia, nightmares, and a recurrent ulcer.
2002 Daily Tel. 3 May 24/8 Recurrent nasal polyps are common in people with other respiratory conditions, such as asthma, hay fever and chronic sinusitis.
c. Crystallography. Designating multiple twinning (twinning n.2 2a); exhibiting such twinning.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > chemistry > crystallography (general) > crystal (general) > crystal types > [adjective] > composite crystals > twin > types of
polysynthetic1805
recurrent1813
1813 F. Accum Elements Crystallogr. iv. i. 280 Recurrent, when, on taking the faces of the crystal by annular rows, from one extremity to the other, we have two numbers, which succeed several times, as, four, eight, four, eight, four. Ex. Recurrent oxid of tin.
1976 Faraday Discuss. (Royal Soc. Chem.) 61 119 In the mineral zussmanite..a kind of recurrent twinning leads to the establishment of localized bands of a new phase.
2002 Jrnl. Solid State Chem. 165 214/1 A recurrent twinning characterized by a three fold axis from one block to the subsequent one occurs in the crystals studied.
3.
a. That returns quickly. Also: having recourse to. Obsolete. rare.Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΚΠ
1656 T. Blount Glossographia Recurrent, returning hastily, running again or back quickly, having recourse to.
b. Of a verse: that reads the same both forwards and backwards, palindromic. Cf. sense B. 1. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > part of poem > [adjective] > relating to or consisting of lines > palindromic
Sotadical1610
retrograde1653
recurrent1706
reciprocal1728
Sotadean1774
Sotadic?a1814
1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Recurrents, or Recurrent Verses, such Verses as are read the same backward and forward.
1799 E. Du Bois Wreath 45 The recurrent verse breaks a sentence in a similar manner, in that exquisite Elegy, the Pharmaceutria of Theocritus.
1821 New Monthly Mag. 2 170 The Palindromes, or Canorine, or recurrent verses, as they were called.
c. That returns repeatedly to a subject. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1895 A. Symons London Nights 63 And with the dawn that vision came again To an unrested and recurrent brain.
B. n.1
1. A verse which reads the same forwards and backwards. Cf. sense A. 3b. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > part of poem > [noun] > line > other types of line
underverse1579
recurrent1605
serpentine verse1605
acatalectic1611
rumbler1670
Pindaric1697
quadruped1800
octonarius1819
asynartete1830
pada1855
chronostichon1859
jingle-jangle1864
sevener1920
1605 W. Camden Remaines ii. 26 Beside these [metres], our Poets hath their knacks as young Schollers call them, as Ecchos.., Serpentine verses, Recurrents, Numeralls, &c.
1656 T. Blount Glossographia (at cited word) A kind of verses called Recurrents.
1751 R. O. Cambridge Scribleriad ii. 16 (note) Reciprocal verses, (also called Retrograde and Recurrents) give the same words whether read backwards or forwards.
2. Anatomy. A recurrent nerve or blood vessel; spec. a recurrent laryngeal nerve (see sense A. 1a).
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > vascular system > blood vessel > [noun] > others
life vein?1515
recurrent1615
subclavian1615
pyloric1714
pudendal1752
prester1753
shunt1923
the world > life > the body > nervous system > nerve > types of nerves > [noun]
sensitive?a1425
motivec1475
life stringc1522
recurrent1615
life corda1631
abducent1681
cord1774
chord1783
motor1824
afferent1828
excitor1836
nerve trunk1850
mixed nerve1861
inhibitory nerve1870
nervelet1875
vaso-motor1887
pilomotor1892
lemniscus1913
the world > life > the body > nervous system > nerve > specific nerves > [noun] > pairs of cranial nerves > specific cranial nerves
optic sinew?c1425
recurrent nerve1578
optic1615
optic nerve1615
recurrent1615
par vagum1666
fourth nerve1681
accessory nerve1682
chorda tympani1807
abducens1809
hypoglossus1811
pneumogastric1826
pneumogastric nerve1827
hypoglossal nerve1828
facial1834
fifth nerve1836–9
vagus1840
vagal nerve1854
vagus nerve1856
Jacobson's nerve1860
oculomotor1868
trigeminus1875
hypoglossal1876
oculimotor1890
pathetic1890
sixth1899
trigeminal1899
1598 A. M. tr. J. Guillemeau Frenche Chirurg. iv. ii. f. 19/2 The muscles, which are serviceable to the speach, or voyce, as are the recurrentes, or retrogradinge muscles.]
1615 H. Crooke Μικροκοσμογραϕια 365 When it commeth to the Axillary artery..it transmitteth..three braunches from the inner side..which being reflected toward the head and vnited do make the right Recurrent.
1724 W. Stukeley Of Spleen 101 All the pairs of nerves..were large and very discernible, particularly the recurrent upon the body of the medulla spinalis.
1741 A. Monro Anat. Nerves 53 in Anat. Human Bones (ed. 3) The Muscles of the Larynx being in a good measure supplied with Nerves from the Recurrents.
1808 J. Barclay Muscular Motions 254 The course of the nervous branches that are called recurrents.
1858 T. W. Nunn Observ. & Notes Arteries of Limbs 15 Plexus formed about the elbow by branches of the superior and inferior profunda, anastomotic, and recurrents of the radial, ulnar, and interosseous.
1876 J. S. Bristowe Treat. Theory & Pract. Med. ii. iv. 554 Pressure on the right recurrent, which may be produced by innominate or subclavian aneurysm, will have a corresponding effect on the right vocal cord.
1913 Lancet 31 May 1528/2 Right recurrent paralysis and dysphagia were almost always due to malignant disease of the œsophagus.
2002 Diabetes & Metabolism 28 413 In the case described,..unilateral temporary vocal cord palsy caused by right inferior laryngeal nerve (recurrent) paralysis associated with type 1 diabetes mellitus is presented.

Compounds

recurrent fever n. Medicine fever that recurs at intervals; an instance of this; spec. = relapsing fever n. at relapsing adj. Compounds.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > fever > [noun] > other fevers
fever hectica1398
emitrichie1398
hectic1398
etisie1527
emphysode fever1547
frenzy-fever1613
purple fever1623
prunella1656
marcid fever1666
remittent1693
feveret1712
rheumatic fever1726
milk fever1739
stationary fever1742
febricula1746
milky fever1747
camp-disease1753
camp-fever1753
sun fever1765
recurrent fever1768
rose fever1782
tooth-fever1788
sensitive fever1794
forest-fever1799
white leg1801
hill-fever1804
Walcheren fever1810
Mediterranean fever1816
malignant1825
relapsing fever1828
rose cold1831
date fever1836
rose catarrh1845
Walcheren ague1847
mountain fever1849
mill fever1850
Malta fever1863
bilge-fever1867
Oroya fever1873
hyperpyrexia1875
famine-fever1876
East Coast fever1881
spirillum fevera1883
kala azar1883
black water1884
febricule1887
urine fever1888
undulant fever1896
rabbit fever1898
rat bite fever1910
Rhodesian sleeping sickness1911
sandfly fever1911
tularaemia1921
sodoku1926
brucellosis1930
Rift Valley fever1931
Zika1952
Lassa fever1970
Marburg1983
1768 G. Fordyce Elements Pract. Physic: Pt. II 3 Recurrent fevers, consisting of more than one Period, no single one lasting more than 24 hours, or till the Evening following.
1860 Lancet 7 Jan. 1/2 The resemblance of this appalling disease in some of its features to an occasional epidemic of our time—the relapsing or recurrent fever..is striking.
1949 H. W. C. Vines Green's Man. Pathol. (ed. 17) x. 249 Conveyance from one patient to another by biting insects has been proved to occur in the case of Sp. duttoni, the parasite of African recurrent (‘tick’) fever.
2002 Bristol Evening Post (Nexis) 9 Mar. 13 In 19th century India malaria killed a million babies under the age of one and another million under the age of 10, disabling another two million with recurrent fevers.
recurrent nova n. Astronomy a nova that undergoes recurrent outbursts (outburst n. 1c).
ΚΠ
1933 Observatory 65 334 It is probably only a matter of time before other ex-novæ will be found to brighten again, and the existence of a class of recurrent novæ must be recognised.
1956 Vistas in Astron. 2 1140 III.B1. Recurrent Novae—Characterized by repeated outbursts in which they behave very like ordinary novae, although with some peculiarities, and by typical symbiotic spectrum when at minimum light.
2006 Scotsman (Nexis) 8 Apr. 32 RS Oph, known as a recurrent nova, has reached its current level of brightness only five times in the past 108 years.
recurrent polyserositis n. Medicine = familial Mediterranean fever n. at Mediterranean fever n. 2.
ΚΠ
1958 M. Rachmilewitz et al. in Israel Med. Jrnl. 17 150 (title) Tuberculin sensitivity in recurrent polyserositis (periodic disease).
1970 Israel Jrnl. Med. Sci. 6 9/1 The name recurrent polyserositis..describes the underlying pathological lesion, a recurrent inflammation of various serous membranes.
2006 Lancet 25 Mar. 1016/1 The disorder might also be referred to as recurrent polyserositis, recurrent hereditary polyserositis, periodic disease, and periodic peritonitis.
recurrent relation n. a relation in which the result of an operation is applied as a new input; (Mathematics) = recurrence relation n. at recurrence n. Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > algebra > [noun] > expression > with reference to preceding members of series
recurrence formula1893
recurrent relation1897
recurrence relation1912
1897 Philos. Trans. 1896 (Royal Soc.) A. 187 522 These recurrent relations between the functions for different values of n hold for general complex values of m and n.
1931 E. W. Hobson Theory Spherical & Ellipsoidal Harmonics ii. 67 Recurrent relations..between the functions Qn(μ) for different values of n.
1990 G. Z. Sun et al. in Internat. Joint Conf. Neural Networks I. 579 The final correction is made at the end of input patterns. These recurrent relations can be derived in terms of chain rule of the derivative of the error function.
2002 Jrnl. Appl. Probability 39 408 (heading) Number of customers served: recurrent relation.
recurrent series n. Mathematics = recurring series n. at recurring adj. Compounds.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > mathematical number or quantity > numerical arrangement > [noun] > set > sequence > series > recurring
recurring series1738
recurrent series1763
1763 W. Emerson Method of Increments 144 To find the sum of 50 terms of the recurrent series..1 + 3x + 8x2 + 21x3, &c.
1879 Amer. Jrnl. Math. 2 250 If, instead of multiplying numerator and denominator by 1 + a10, we multiply by the infinite series 1 + a10 + a20 +.., the denominator becomes representative and the invariantive part of the numerator becomes the recurrent series given in the table.
1967 Econometrica 35 264 The power series G(z)..is a recurrent series which is absolutely convergent in the disk |z| < |r1−1|.
1992 Amer. Math. Monthly 99 541 Most of his books and articles concentrate on number theory, recurrent series, and recreational mathematics.

Derivatives

reˈcurrently adv. repeatedly.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > frequency > [adverb] > repeatedly
day and nightOE
morning, noon, and nightc1325
new and newa1425
time after time?a1425
over and overa1470
toties quoties1525
again and again1533
reiteratively1619
over and over again1637
repeatedlya1647
times without number1658
to and again1659
—— in, —— out1815
time and time again1821
day in (and) day out1824
recurringly1828
repetitiously1828
recurrently1841
repetitively1872
ever and again1880
recursively1901
twenty-four hours a day1914
serially1978
1841 C. Lane in tr. Z. C. Gatti de Gamond Phalanstery Introd. p. iii This Uniter, Unity, Unit, or One, is the premonitor whence exists the premonition 'Unity', which so recurrently becomes conscious in man.
1877 ‘H. A. Page’ T. De Quincey: Life & Writings II. xix. 183 This tendency to real life..declaring itself recurrently and with great strength.
1903 H. James Ambassadors i. iii. 30 Strether was in fact recurrently shameless in the presence of the tailors, though it was just over the heads of the tailors that his countryman most loftily looked.
2004 M. M. Lewis Scars of Soul i. iii. 53 As a teenager I recurrently handed over test tubes of urine for my father to take back to his job.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

> see also

also refers to : re-currentn.2
<
adj.n.11578
see also
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