What's the difference between reemergent and renascent?

Reemergent


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Discontinuation of phlorizin in phlorizin-treated diabetic rats resulted in the reemergence of insulin resistance.
  • (2) Analysis of paired NP and ME isolates from three children with recurrent OME caused by NTHI indicated that the second episode was caused by the reinfection with a different strain rather than persistence and reemergence of the first strain.
  • (3) So, there was some amount of symbolism in the Lakers season ending with a healthy Howard essentially checking out of the game and an injured Kobe Bryant, still recovering from surgery, reemerging to play the role of a captain going down with his ship.
  • (4) The prediction is made that different countries will select partially different sires, but genetically isolated strains will not reemerge.
  • (5) Orthodontic diagnosis and treatment planning topics either reflect the new technology available in the health fields or reiterate the older material that reemerges from generation to generation.
  • (6) The major factor in its reemergence is the progressive improvement in neonatal care, resulting in salvage of infants who formerly would have been lost.
  • (7) The clinical history and the initial phase of the psychotherapy of a hospitalized psychotic adolescent are presented to demonstrate the loss of "transitional capabilities" coinciding with the onset of a psychotic regression and their subsequent restoration as the patient reemerged from overt psychosis.
  • (8) Interest in abortion research is reemerging, partly as a result of political changes and partly due to evidence of the contribution of induced abortion to maternal mortality in developing countries.
  • (9) The reverse process, inactivation of the proton symport induced by glucose or 2-deoxyglucose, was not accompanied by reemergence of the facilitated diffusion function.
  • (10) Granulocytopoiesis in this system was confirmed by the following observations: (1) presence of mitotic figures in promyelocytes and myelocytes; (2) early disappearance of mature granulocytes, followed by their reemergence after 4 days in culture, and (3) presence of immature granulocytes even after 10-14 days in culture.
  • (11) With modest Ch-supersaturation, dissolution was followed by the reemergence of a new vesicle population that coexisted metastably with mixed micelles.
  • (12) However, a seemingly transient deficit may nonetheless reemerge when the environment imposes a new learning situation or an alteration in reinforcement contingencies.
  • (13) A major complication has been the reemergence of numerous severe painful crises, inferred to be caused by an increased blood viscosity consequent to a rising hematocrit value, after a hiatus of many years.
  • (14) Many changes in the epidemiology of streptococcal infections during the 1980s can be traced to the reemergence of more virulent strains of the organism.
  • (15) The greater staff awareness of the need for occupational therapy in home health care requires occupational therapists to continually prevent old nonreferring habits from reemerging and to orient and educate new staff members as they enter the home health care field.
  • (16) However, with contemporary sophisticated treatment planning techniques that are now available in most contemporary departments of radiation oncology, radiation therapy is reemerging as an important and major treatment technique in the management of patients with gynecologic cancer.
  • (17) All three resolved with antileukemic therapy, only to reemerge when the leukemia relapsed, suggesting a causal relationship among these phenomena.
  • (18) Ten minutes later he reemerges, shaking out his black anorak which is glistening with rain.
  • (19) Retrograde coronary sinus perfusion has recently reemerged as an attractive means of delivering cardioplegic solutions during open heart procedures.
  • (20) Vigorous prosecution of perpetrators and the reemergence of clinics after damage probably helped to curb the epidemic.

Renascent


Definition:

  • (a.) Springing or rising again into being; being born again, or reproduced.
  • (a.) See Renaissant.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) There's WhatsApp and Kik on the messaging side, along with a (possibly) renascent BBM – not to mention Line, KakaoTalk and WeChat, which have big ambitions to expand beyond their home markets in Asia.
  • (2) But his obsessions were his own, fuelled by a conviction that he was repudiating the wrongs of a renascent Soviet state.
  • (3) Suddenly there was only one team in it as a renascent Newcastle enhanced their thoroughly refreshing, if unlikely, Champions League challenge.
  • (4) The recently emerging interest of urologists in utility of the laparoscope for a variety of urologic surgery is a welcome renascence of this procedure, which has been used mainly by our gynecologic colleagues, in part because of our own lack of pursuit in its development.
  • (5) These issues point to a need for a renascence in the kind of research which is based on clinical observation and on listening to what patients have to tell, with such lines of work brought into much closer contact than before with corresponding laboratory investigation.
  • (6) After four years spent alongside each other in various technical areas it will be strange for Newcastle United’s interim head coach to see his former ally urging on renascent Crystal Palace from the adjacent dugout.
  • (7) There was certainly plenty to admire about the way Guardiola’s team passed the ball and, again, encouraging signs of Raheem Sterling’s renascent form.
  • (8) He’s a much loved guy in our dressing room and for him to be back on the training ground will be really terrific.” By the time Gutiérrez returns Pardew trusts his renascent team will have built on their run of four successive wins.

Words possibly related to "renascent"