reascent


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reascent

(ˌriːəˈsɛnt)
n
a further ascent
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in classic literature ?
After having been on his feet twenty-four hours, in the exhausting work of mountain-climbing, Sir George began the reascent at the head of the relief party of six guides, to recover the corpse of his brother.
(2014) AltitudeOmics: the integrative physiology of human acclimatization to hypobaric hypoxia and its retention upon reascent. PloS one 9, e92191.
Nine of eleven chapters review the roles that Rabin filled during the fifty years that preceded his reascent in 1992, when he led the Labor Party to victory at the polls.
Then it was time for the Republicans' reascent, until the Iraq war and the financial crises of 2001 and 2007 under former President George W.
Long term follow up in our study (up to 12 months) showed 03 cases (2.2%) to have testicular reascent after single scrotal incision orchidopexy.
Reascent should not be attempted until symptoms resolve and the patient is no longer taking dexamethasone.
FOURTEEN Territorial Army soldiers have taken on their biggest challenge - climbing 157 peaks in Wales Since Tuesday, soldiers from the Welsh Transport Regiment RLC (Volunteers) have started on the Marilyn Challenge - climbing all 157 peaks classed as Marilyns, which must be separate peaks with a reascent of at least 150 metres from any other peak.
They cover the controversy of the generation of matter in Plotinus, the riddle of the partly undescended soul in Plotinus, the weakness of the soul in its relation to evil, two modes of reascent as a new sign of the impact of the quarrel on Plotinus' thought, Plotinian contemplative demiurgy, and God as CAUSA SUI in Plotinus and its possible Gnostic sources.
The goddess Inanna's journey begins by the awakening of her auditory faculty, for the word "ear" in Sumerian also stands for wisdom: "From the Great Above she opened her ear to the Great Below." (1) What follows is a narrative of descent, bodily fragmentation, rescue, substitution, self-transformation (common to so many myths), and slow reascent: Inanna is stripped of her clothes and jewels as she passes through the seven gates of the underworld; struck by her envious sister Ereshkigal, ruler of the underworld, she is "turned into a corpse, /a piece of rotting meat, /and hung from a hook on the wall," until rescued and reanimated from the Great Below by her faithful servant, Ninshubur.
(1-10) (23) Their fall conforms to the cycle of nature, "She to the Earth, and he below the Deep" (12), as does their reascent. When "the swift hand of rime / Renews the morning, and again they climb" (13-14), the speaker identifies with the bird as she hopes for another restoration: "Then lett no cloudy change, create my sorrow, / I'll think 'tis night, and I may rise to morrow" (15-16).
One is helped by the other to get the awkwardly sloshing load balanced on her head, and off they go again, leaving us to imagine their fraught reascent through the slippery, crowded alleys.