0 to move further away into the distance, or to become less clear or less bright: --
1 to move further away into the distance, or to become less clear: --
First, flood-water rice cultivation involved the transplanting of seedlings into fresh-water pools, which remained as rivers receded after seasonal flooding.
Bowring's concern with racial purity did not recede in later years.
As the residual trees grow and forest regeneration occurs, the baseflow would recede to the normal flow.
When allografts were rejected, the graft epidermis receded from the borders of the graft so that rejection was easily recognizable.
Blocks with water extraction more than recharge indicate receding water table zones.
If 0ah0 and 0e0 did in fact follow a collision course, we would expect that one or the other would recede from low front position.
A related problem concerns the shape of a receding meniscus in a channel.
This feature recedes in the speech of those who reject local identity.