back
back (bak)
noun
- the part of the body opposite to the front; in humans and many other animals, the part to the rear or top reaching from the nape of the neck to the end of the spine
- the backbone or spine
- the part of a chair that supports one's back
- the part of a garment or harness that fits on the back of a person or animal
- physical strength put some back into the work
- the rear or hinder part of anything; part behind or opposite the front the back of the room, the back of his leg
- the part or side of anything that is less often used, seen, etc. the back of the hand; the back of a carpet, textile, etc.; the back of a knife
- the part of a book where the sections are sewed or glued together; part covered by the spine
- the spine of a book
- Mining the roof or overhead part of an underground passage
- Sports a player positioned behind many of his or her teammates, as a running back in football or a halfback in soccer
Etymology: ME bak < OE baec; akin to ON bak, OHG bahho
adjective
- at the rear or back; behind
- distant or remote back country
- of or for a time in the past a back copy of a newspaper, back pay
- in a backward direction; returning; reversed a back step
- Phonet. articulated with the tongue toward the back of the mouth: said of certain vowels, as (o̵̅o̅) in cool
adverb
- at, to, or toward the rear; backward
- to or toward a former position or location
- into or toward a previous condition
- to or toward an earlier time
- so as to keep in reserve or concealment to hold back information
- in return or requital to pay someone back
Etymology: ME bac < abac < OE on bæc, backward
transitive verb
- to cause to move backward, or to the rear: often with up
- to be at the back of; stand behind
- to support or help, as with money, endorsement, etc.
- to make a wager in support of; bet on
- to get on the back of; mount
- to provide with a back or backing
- to form the back of
- to sign on the back; endorse
- to provide security for (a currency, loan, etc.)
intransitive verb
- to move or go backward to back into a room
- to move (into a desired position) through the faulty performance of an opponent to back into a championship
- to have the back in a certain place or direction the house backs on a lake
- Meteorol. to shift counterclockwise (in the Northern Hemisphere): said of the changing direction of a wind
back and fill
- to handle sails so that they alternately spill wind and fill with wind, as in maneuvering in a narrow channel
- to zigzag
- ☆ to vacillate, as in a decision
back and forth
- to and fro
- from side to side
back down
☆back off
- to move back a short distance
- Informal back down
- Informal to refrain or cease from pursuing or annoying; lay off
back out
- to withdraw from an enterprise
- to refuse to keep a promise
back out of
- to withdraw from (an enterprise)
- to refuse to keep (a promise)
back up
- to support or help
- to move or go backwardalso back away
- to accumulate as the result of a stoppage traffic backed up for a mile
- Baseball to take a position behind (a teammate) in case there should be a mishandled or erratically thrown ball
- Comput. to make a standby or alternate copy of (data, a file, etc.)
back water
- to use oars, a propeller, etc. to move backward or prevent drifting
- ☆ to withdraw from a position or a claim
behind someone's back
be (flat) on one's back
get off someone's back
☆get one's back up
go back on
☆ Informal- to be faithless or disloyal to; betray
- to fail to keep (a promise, one's word, etc.)
(in) back of
☆put someone's back up
turn one's back on
- to show anger, contempt, etc. toward by turning away from
- to ignore the plight of; desert; fail
with one's back to the wall
back (bak)
noun
Etymology: Du bak < LL bacca, water bowl
Back (bak)
Etymology: after George Back (1796-1878), Arctic navigator
Webster's New World College Dictionary Copyright © 2005 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
| Topic | Replies | Latest Post |
|---|---|---|
| PLEASE BRING BACK THE OLD FORMAT! | 3 | 3 months ago |
| The Word is back | 14 | 9 months ago |
| Is Agora Back? | 24 | 3 years ago |
| take a back seat | 6 | 5 years ago |
| Weird Word in Back of my Head. | 13 | 6 years ago |
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