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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a reoccurrence of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe the repeated happening of an event or situation.
Example: "The doctor noted a reoccurrence of the symptoms, indicating that further treatment may be necessary."
Alternatives: "a recurrence of" or "a repeat of".
Exact(34)
"The last thing on my mind was a reoccurrence of what happened".
As players approach their return, they often feel a sense of trepidation about suffering a reoccurrence of their injury.
Fabregas has just returned from an injury lay-off, having missed two matches after a reoccurrence of his hamstring problem.
But if he were to be separated from this dog, he would be at risk of a reoccurrence of his depression".
Litvinenko accused May of failing to act to prevent a reoccurrence of the type of attack to which her husband fell victim.
The commission, headed by Richard Joel, the president of Hillel, a Jewish campus group, recommended a series of organizational changes to prevent a reoccurrence of unchecked abuse.
Similar(26)
The purpose of such treatments is to attempt to prevent reoccurrence or limit the severity of any reoccurrence of a particular complaint consistent with the preventative philosophy that is fundamental to osteopathic principles.
The human brain encodes experience in an integrative fashion by binding together the various features of an event (i.e., stimuli and responses) into memory "event files". A subsequent reoccurrence of an event feature can then cue the retrieval of the memory file to "prime" cognition and action.
It needs supplementing so as to avoid the problem of a spiraling reoccurrence of challenges to an agent's freedom.
On Monday, Liu's coach, Sun Haiping, tearfully told reporters that last weekend Liu had experienced an unexpected reoccurrence of an Achilles' tendon injury.
A more recent retrospective analysis suggested that the use of anti-inflammatories such as ketorolac (a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug) given to patients before and after mastectomy led to a lower reoccurrence of their breast cancer, implicating surgery-mediated inflammation as a key initiator of wound-induced cancer growth (Forget et al, 2010; Retsky et al, 2013).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com