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The phrase "a recurrent character" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a character that appears multiple times throughout a story, film, or series.
Example: "In the novel, the author introduces a recurrent character who provides comic relief in various situations."
Alternatives: "a recurring character" or "a repeated character".
Exact(2)
Caleb is a version of a recurrent character in my fiction, a gentle boy, whose sweet nature will no doubt be his undoing.
The same point is actually made by Christie, via Mrs. Ariadne Oliver, a recurrent character who is a detective-story writer.
Similar(58)
One recurrent character, a bird man, is entirely dreamlike.
Also in Toibin's fiction is the recurrent character of an emotionally distant mother, one who uproots her children to leave them with relatives, as his own mother did with him and his brother Niall, when his father suffered "some sort of brain aneurysm".
Given the high prevalence of MDD and its recurrent character new minimal interventions are needed to prevent relapse and recurrence in depression.
The novel lacks the modifying, likable intelligence that Rendell's recurrent character, Chief Inspector Wexford, brings to other of her works, and the result is a wan puzzler painted in broad strokes.
Rauch has also said that his subjects often derive from his dreams, and that the recurrent character types — sensitive young man, bearded older man, chunky young woman, and proletarian, military, or fire-brigade squad — all represent him.
In order to thicken his fiction, Balzac hit upon the innovation of the recurrent character.
Several studies focused therefore for ictal versus interictal electrophysiological abnormalities, in order to understand the predisposition and the recurrent character of attacks.
The parallelization is not trivial and cannot be done automatically by the existing compilers due to the recurrent character of formulas.
Its main characters all have models within the genre; Marie has much in common with Dorita Fairlie Bruce's recurrent character "Dimsie", while Hilary is likewise based on Dorothy Vicary's villainous "Una Vickers" in Niece of the Headmistress.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com