Definition of Rearose

1. rearise [v] - See also: rearise

Lexicographical Neighbors of Rearose

rearly
rearm
rearmament
rearmaments
rearmed
rearmice
rearming
rearmouse
rearmouses
rearms
rearomatization
rearomatize
rearomatizes
rearomatizing
rearose (current term)
rearousal
rearousals
rearouse
rearoused
rearouses
rearousing
rearrange
rearrange the deck chairs on the Titanic
rearrangeable
rearranged
rearrangement
rearrangement reaction
rearrangement reactions
rearrangements

Literary usage of Rearose

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The New Stone Age in Northern Europe by John Mason Tyler (1921)
"... barbarians to law and to introduce order. Agriculture and industry rearose or returned slowly. Finally after the "dark ages" great cathedrals 1 308: 86. ..."

2. The German Emperor as Shown in His Public Utterances by William, Christian Frederick Gauss (1915)
"Just as in the far east of the monarchy at his bidding the powerful stronghold, which once had implanted German culture into the east, rearose and is now ..."

3. The German Emperor as Shown in His Public Utterances by William, Christian Frederick Gauss (1915)
"Just as in the far east of the monarchy at his bidding the powerful stronghold, which once had implanted German culture into the east, rearose and is now ..."

4. The Passing of the Turkish Empire in Europe by Bernard Granville Baker (1913)
"... so he readily took the excuse of interfering with the West again when Zapolya died, and the question of Hungarian succession rearose. ..."

5. A Dictionary of the Bible by John D. Davis (1911)
"Cort/rearose of children giving no aid to parents <i«i (Mark vii. 11). The reprehensible prac- needing their support, on the pretense that have been ..."

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