单词 | relapsing |
释义 | relapsingn. The action of relapse v. (in various senses); an instance of this. ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > apostasy > [noun] renoirie1340 apostasyc1380 recidivationa1425 perversiona1450 pervertinga1450 relapsec1475 resiluation1513 departing1526 residuationa1535 back-starting1535 backsliding1554 abrenunciation1557 recreant1570 backslide1586 relapsing1591 recreantness1611 apostating1648 recadency1648 apostatizing1659 lapse1660 apostatism1814 renegadism1823 the mind > will > decision > irresolution or vacillation > reversal of or forsaking one's will or purpose > [noun] > falling back into error relapsing1591 society > morality > moral evil > wrong conduct > [noun] > moral fall or lapse > moral relapse recidivationa1425 relapsec1475 resiluation1513 residuationa1535 relapsing1591 quadrulapse1595 recumbency1601 recidivism1884 recidivity1890 the world > time > change > change to something else, transformation > change of direction, reversion > [noun] gain-turning1340 reversion1547 regression1583 unmaking1587 retrogradation1638 repedation1646 metathesis1653 recommencement1655 antecedency1656 remutation1692 reconversion1759 relapsing1772 recurrence1789 revertal1824 switcheroo1933 1591 in W. Greenwell Wills & Inventories Registry Durham (1860) II. 199 For probate bondes and regestring 16s. 4d. For relapsinge of the sequestration 5s. 2d. 1611 J. Speed Hist. Great Brit. ix. xvi. 655/2 Conuicted of periurious relapsing. 1649 J. Milton Tenure of Kings 29 The Presbyterians..cannot with all thir shifting and relapsing, wash off the guiltiness from thir owne hands. 1772 J. Priestley in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 62 194 I had instances of the relapsing of this restored air to its former noxious state. 1825 Republican 18 Feb. 205 The writer of the Gospel..had witnessed a relapsing on the part of some Christians. 1865 Reader No. 124. 540/3 The relapsings and rallyings of Christendom. 1907 M. E. Ryan Indian Love Lett. 6 Your letter is a little cry of protest against the relapsing of the savage,—an escaped convert. 1986 PMLA 101 855/2 The winding and even the occasional relapsing of the movement of thought. 2008 J. O. Prochaska & J. M. Prochaska in W. T. O'Donohue & M. A. Cucciare Terminating Psychotherapy vii. 153 We prepare people for a six-month concerted effort where they need to be prepared to work hard to keep from relapsing. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022). relapsingadj. 1. Of a person: that relapses into sin, error, or wrongdoing. Also of a sin or crime: †characterized by relapse (obsolete). ΘΚΠ society > morality > moral evil > wrong conduct > [adjective] > lapsing or lapsed > relapsing or relapsed relapsed1499 relapsing1594 recidivist1883 recidivistic1890 society > faith > aspects of faith > apostasy > [adjective] forraughtc1175 renayedc1380 apostate1382 apostasied1393 relapse?a1425 departed1439 renegate1488 retractive1509 apostatical1532 shrinking1535 apostatatec1540 runagate1558 apostatic1583 apostatous1588 collapsed1609 renegado1612 recreant1613 apotactical1615 apostatized1629 apostating1630 lapsed1638 apostated1642 apostatizing1652 renegade1664 diabolonian1682 backsliding1816 relapsing1864 backslidden1871 1594 L. Andrewes Serm. before Q. Eliz. at Hampton Court in init. The Sodomites are an example of impenitent wilful sinners; and Lot's wife of imperseverant and relapsing righteous persons. 1653 G. Daniel Occas. Refl. in Idyllia 20 Dead wth ye Terror of relapsing crimes. a1656 J. Hales Four Tracts (1677) ii. 32 An active or judicative Power in the Priest, concurring with God in reconciling relapsing Christians. 1720 J. Bingham Origines Ecclesiasticæ VIII. xviii. iii. 123 They allowed no second publick Penance to many relapsing Sinners. a1773 A. Butler Medit. & Disc. Christianity (1791) I. xiii. 106 This is nothing to the unparallelled ingratitude of the relapsing sinner. 1839 W. Wordsworth Poet. Wks. (1865) IV. 338 Soon the relapsing penitent may boast Of yet more heinous guilt, with fiercer pride. 1864 E. B. Pusey Daniel vii. 456 God..won Nebuchadnezzar, as he does so many relapsing Christians. 1925 L. I. Newman Jewish Infl. on Christian Reform Movements ii. v. 378 He issued again the ‘Turbato corde’ Bull wherein he condemned with even more explicitness the relapsing Judaizers. 1953 Harvard Theol. Rev. 46 211 The Homilies on John, where the unflattering comparison of the relapsing sinner appears. 2004 M. V. de Almeida Earth-colored Sea iv. 73 Mendes Correia..had called for the segregation of relapsing criminals. 2. Of a person: suffering from a relapse of a disease. Of a disease: tending to relapse or recur; esp. in relapsing fever n. at Compounds. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > [adjective] > relapsing recidive1659 relapsing1659 1659 W. S. Macollo's XCIX Canons in Physick 75 The evil humours remaining after a Crise, are wont to make one recidive or relapsing. 1729 E. Strother Pract. Observ. Epidemical Fever 49 It seldom happens that Persons are seiz'd with long or frequently relapsing Quartans, but the last Effects of them are Obstructions of the Liver, Spleen, or Mesentery. 1860 Lancet 28 Apr. 413/2 Nothing is mentioned that would lead to the inference that he regarded these relapsing cases as a distinct or peculiar type of fever. 1871 W. B. Woodman tr. C. A. Wunderlich On Temperature in Dis. 373 If the low temperature persists for a longer time..we get the relapsing form, and if the temperature does not fall quite to normal the form with recrudescing fastigium. 1904 Practitioner May 657 Four of the black sentries..were admitted as ‘relapsing’ patients. 1988 Q. N. Myrvik & R. S. Weiser Fund. Med. Bacteriol. & Mycol. (ed. 2) xxx. 433 The term ‘early syphilis’ includes primary, secondary, early relapsing and early latent forms of the disease as contrasted with later stages. 2006 Independent 30 Nov. 40/3 He tried rehab a couple of times, but drug addiction is a relapsing illness. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > falling > [adjective] > falling back from a height relapsing1663 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > backward movement > [adjective] > slipping backsliding1611 relapsing1737 1663 J. Mayne tr. Lucian Part of Lucian sig. Ee2 Forced to roll relapsing stones against steep hills. 1737 R. Glover Leonidas v. 195 So with relapsing waves the ebbing tide Beats for a time against the shelving strand. Compounds relapsing fever n. Medicine a fever that recurs; spec. an infectious disease characterized by a number of episodes of fever lasting for several days and separated by afebrile intervals of similar length, caused by bacteria of the genus Borrelia and occurring in two major forms, one transmitted by lice and the other by ticks. 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 1828 J. Macculloch Ess. Remittent & Intermittent Dis. I. ii. 124 Such is the simple disease: a chronic or relapsing fever without accessory symptoms. 1877 F. T. Roberts Handbk. Med. (ed. 3) I. 131 Relapsing fever is an acute specific disease..and it is highly infectious. 1966 D. M. Dunlop & S. Alstead Textbk. Med. Treatm. (ed. 10) 218 Tetracycline..is the drug of choice, although subsequent relapses of tick-borne relapsing fever due to Bor. duttoni may be experienced. 2001 Newsday (Nexis) 2 May a24 This newly discovered spirochete appears genetically to more closely resemble those in the relapsing fever group. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < |
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