regress - use in sentences

Object

  • tumor: Also, there was little evidence of acute inflammatory infiltration in regressing tumors.
  • client: One a client regressed into the past by Ormond and the other, her past-life alter ego, a 19th century psychic investigator.
  • bit: Let me regress a little bit and let you know why this little bit of braggadocio was put on paper.

Converse of object

  • avoid: And avoid the potential infinite regress of symbolic meaning by being fully grounded in the real world.
  • have: If from another, then we have an unsatisfactory infinite regress of explanations.
  • involve: At some point the system and the meta-system might be indistinguishable, although this may involve a virtually infinite regress.
  • suggest: Furthermore, the way in which all this is done suggests a mental regress into " big brother " thinking.

Preposition: into

  • childhood: You go into one memory inside the body and the client is regressed into childhood - the voice changes, they feel small.

Adjective modifier

  • infinite: Mutual belief is defined in terms of an infinite regress of nested beliefs.
  • vicious: Try to devise a way of preserving his insights while avoiding the vicious regresses to which he can give rise.
  • endless: The nightmare of the ' rational ' mind is attempting to evaluate the outcome of the outcome of the outcome in endless regress.
  • temporal: The second, which he terms the kalām argument, holds that an infinite temporal regress is impossible because an actual infinite is impossible.

Modifying Another Word

  • spontaneously: This becomes necessary only if the disease has reached a certain, well defined stage, as the milder forms often regress spontaneously.
  • back: When the " cured " Norman Osborn suddenly regressed back to insanity, he came looking for Parker.
  • then: And while many autistic children show signs of autism from birth, some seem to develop normally but then regress after their first year.
  • not: When problems are found the test rig is extended to attempt to cover previous problems and make sure that we do not regress.
  • hypnotically: There have also been many instances when hypnotically regressed subjects have provided information they could not have acquired normally.

Possessives

  • experimenter: In what ways are chains of failures of technical fixes historically connected to chains of attempts to escape the experimenter's regress?

Used with why or when

  • when: And I began a test suite, because experience had shown that Autoconf has a pronounced tendency to regress when we change it.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.