recede in English

verb
1
go or move back or further away from a previous position.
the flood waters had receded

Use "recede" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "recede" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "recede", or refer to the context using the word "recede" in the English Dictionary.

1. They will never recede like a xylophone.

2. Flood waters finally began to recede in November.

3. He seemed to recede into a world of his own.

4. Cool colors recede(Sentencedict), increasing the sense of depth.

5. The flood waters finally began to recede in November.

6. Generally, warm colours advance in painting and cold colours recede.

7. Recollection picture is piecing together, reminds my you to recede.

8. As memories of Fukushima recede, interest in nuclear power has revived.

9. Hoomey and Nails heard its engine recede into the distance.

10. As the waves recede, they cause a vacuum, drawing air back through the turbine.

11. In cool weather, serpents do not tempt; they grow diffident, recede and hibernate.

12. Calculus, or tartar, is difficult to remove and makes the gums recede

13. Until the waters recede, California officials said they can not assess damage.

14. The consequence was that he returned a par 72 to recede into the pack.

15. The air was warm and muggy, and the top seemed to recede as he approached.

16. Buboes rarely require any form of local care, but instead recede with systemic antibiotic therapy.

17. Interest rates of all types have been falling as the economy slows and inflation fears recede.

18. My hostage to fortune for 2004 is that this sort of guff has and will recede.

19. What is misleading is the idea that Mr Bush will be able to recede into the background.

20. His survey of the night sky found all faraway galaxies recede, or move away, from the Earth.

21. Then, the better we get to know some one, the more these symbolic signposts recede in importance.

22. When tightened, the blocks act as brakes; when lifted, they recede and allow the vanes to turn.

23. In fact, Hugh had seemed to recede further and further into the distance with every step she took.

24. Coincide definition: go with, fall together synonyms: cooccur, coexist, overlap, co-occur antonyms: disallow, decertify, disapprove, forbid, recede

25. Earlier plot sequences recede into the past of the text; now Slothrop exists only in traces.

26. This time the wave didn't recede, this time it built, went on building, higher and higher.

27. After the waters recede, extensive lagoons and marshes are formed as the ground gradually dries out.

28. Elsewhere in Northern California the surging rivers that have forced evacuation of more than 000 people began to recede.

29. Many died when they rushed to the beach after seeing the water recede, exposing the coral and fish.

30. The roses swarmed in the heat-haze, seeming to flow and recede, seeming to peak and slide like waves.

31. 12 At press time, stop, changsha city, but a slight rain down some section water is still not recede.

32. In the evenings, when I am apt to recede to a withdrawn vacancy, she will come to stroke my hand.

33. Billabongs can also be formed when a pool of water is left behind when flood or tidal waters recede

34. Wrinkles appear, hair begins to turn gray, the hairline may recede, and aches and pains that were never noticed before manifest themselves.

35. Note the perspective of clouds and colour in the sky; how the clouds recede in distance nearer to the horizon.

36. As the rest of women’s bodies recede in spring fashions, the clavicles, or Collarbones, and the upper chest between them, is rising to prominence

37. Cycle definition: an interval during which a recurring sequence of events occurs synonyms: phase angle, interval, rhythm, round, phase antonyms: recede, fail

38. Tensions may also recede as accountability regimes shift responsibility and reporting relationships toward the people served and away from remote, nonAboriginal governments.

39. Tensions may also recede as accountability regimes shift responsibility and reporting relationships toward the people served and away from remote, non-Aboriginal governments.

40. Europe Confronts a Covid-19 Rebound as Vaccine Hopes Recede Slow vaccinations, outpaced by virus variants, and indecision by EU governments are deepening the continent’s gloom

41. When the waters of the sea began to recede, a canal was dug so that the boats in Muynak harbor could have access to the open sea.

42. The root word ced: “go,” for instance, present in the words precede and recede, has variant spellings of Cess and ceed.Examples proceeding from these variant spellings, all of …

43. The term Canted is short for “cantilevered.” Canted Amish hutches have a very distinctive shape, as the middle section juts out, and the side sections seem to recede

44. Allowed definition: make it possible through a specific action or lack of action for something to happen synonyms: permit, pass, let antonyms: prevent, recede, fail, appear Synonym.com is the web's best resource for English synonyms, antonyms, and definitions.

45. Allow definition: make it possible through a specific action or lack of action for something to happen synonyms: permit, pass, let antonyms: prevent, recede, fail, appear Synonym.com is the web's best resource for English synonyms, antonyms, and definitions.

46. For instance , there are plenty of people out there who will engage me in casual conversation and might even find me amusing until they discover what I do for a living...and then they recede like a tide from the beach and I 'm left in the sand feeling like I 've got a big red X on my forehead .

47. On 5 January 1527 , Felix Manz became the first casualty of the edict, and the first Swiss Anabaptist to be martyred at the hands of the Protestant s. While Manz only wanted "to bring together those who were willing to accept Christ , obey the Word, and follow in His footsteps, to unite with these by baptism, and to leave the rest in their present conviction", Zwingli and the council accused him of obstinately refusing "to recede from his error and caprice".