Examples of 'rear its head' in a sentence
Meaning of "rear its head"
rear its head: Refers to a problem, issue, or situation that emerges or becomes apparent after a period of being unnoticed or dormant. For example, the security breach finally rear its head after months of undetected infiltration
How to use "rear its head" in a sentence
Basic
Advanced
rear its head
This dispute will rear its head again.
The most important thing is to know that jealousy will rear its head.
Karma will rear its head at some point.
Malnourishment is beginning to rear its head.
It will rear its head every now and then.
Inflation will rear its head.
Pride can rear its head in all kinds of ugly ways.
Is to know that jealousy will rear its head.
This attitude can rear its head at the very beginning of a business discussion.
It would be surprising if it did not rear its head again.
Reality will rear its head.
Only he controls all the relationships where disappointment will rear its head.
Is going to rear its head.
One of these days the right crisis is going to rear its head.
But that history can rear its head.
See also
There are still loopholes, still opportunities for discrimination to rear its head.
Intimacy picks the worst moments to rear its head again.
Once again, we see the conflict between industry, employment and the environment rear its head.
But from time to time one does still rear its head.
And here is where the worst of institutionalized anti-immigrant racism will rear its head.
One I never thought would rear its head.
But whatever the action, human competition tends to rear its head.
Combatting racism, which continues to rear its head.
I had to protect against a far greater evil, should it ever rear its head.
But unlike previous recessions, the spectre of inflation did not rear its head.
I made a deal… One I never thought would rear its head.
Yes, once again, the ugly fragmentation word gets to rear its head.
I can pretend otherwise, but eventually that “ throwaway piece of plastic ” will rear its head.
But it turns out that our old friend, Ambiguity, is going to rear its head.