Crossword clues for reemerge
reemerge
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Reemerge \Re`["e]*merge"\ (r?`?*m?rj"), v. i. To emerge again.
Wiktionary
vb. 1 To emerge again, to come into view after having hidden. 2 To come out of a situation, object or a liquid after having entered it.
Usage examples of "reemerge".
The wave was lapping at the very shores of Old Hummums Hotel when the officious young waiter reemerged from the rear entrance with a tail-coated constable.
He stepped into the bedroom he shared with Royden and reemerged a minute later wearing his overshirt and cap and carrying a pile of worn books.
After staring dumbly at it for most of a minute, she reemerged from the chamber, and called Lurt over.
The paw reemerged, wielding a golden rectangle that gleamed as bright as a torch.
They ducked for cover then reemerged, inching their way along the ridge.
After World War II, the BIS reemerged as the main clearing house for European currencies and, behind the scenes, the favored meeting place of central bankers.
Mine own battle will melt away into the Neck, to reemerge on the Fever.
Roger felt himself expand instantaneously to infinite size, shrink as suddenly to minuteness, and disappear, to reemerge on the other side.
Menges had reemerged in F-space above the lunar farside not far from the survey ship, then closed in gravdrive.
And when the maces reemerged, Soong's battle groups used the opportunity to take refuge in warpspace themselves.
How had he suddenly reemerged from obscurity as a man of considerable wealth and social standing with no record of his movements during that time that could be traced?
A minute later she reemerged holding a cup of coffee and began making her way back to the guest section of the house.
A short distance farther on Mitch tried the cab of another, then reemerged, shaking his head.
Britain reemerged amid a plain of lakes extending from Norway to Spain.
We learned to calibrate our circuits to amazing accuracies—things sent for weeks reemerged within micro-seconds of the predicted time.