Exact(1)
But then he'd trot up alongside me, mugs clattering, and it would recede.
Similar(51)
The kind of candid, almost tactile reporting that made "What It Takes" so remarkable would recede from our mainstream political journalism, replaced by canned interviews and forensic studies of voting records and public remarks.
Nearly three years ago, Mr. Redstone announced plans to split his empire into two publicly traded companies, and it seemed for a time that he would recede into semi-retirement.
It ensured that the sex abuse crisis would recede only very gradually, that the closure that many ordinary Catholics want to feel would remain elusive, and that the crimes of the past would keep intruding, with every public appearance by a compromised cardinal, into an otherwise much-improved present.
But you have it backwards: If you learned to relax, then stress would recede.
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — Alice and Jon Galvin had waited patiently for the day that the water would recede and this flood-ravaged city would drop its barricades and let them go home again, only to find that there is no going home again.
Burma would recede in the mind, allowing us to "move on".
On the 25th the survivors huddled on the roof, still hoping that the waters would recede.
But Mr. King repeated his view that the inflation rate probably would recede in 2012.
Mr. Huntington's metaphor invited expectations that the third wave, too, would recede.
All this would recede in Rowan's life, Frisch knew, a blip easily calcified.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com