| a children's mummer's parade, as on the Fourth of July, with prizes for the best costumes. |
| a calculus or concretion found in the stomach or intestines of certain animals, esp. ruminants, formerly reputed to be an effective remedy for poison. |
back1 (bæk) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 1. | the posterior part of the human body, extending from the neck to the pelvisRelated: dorsal |
| 2. | the corresponding or upper part of an animal |
| 3. | the spinal column |
| 4. | the part or side of an object opposite the front |
| 5. | the part or side of anything less often seen or used: the back of a carpet; the back of a knife |
| 6. | the part or side of anything that is furthest from the front or from a spectator: the back of the stage |
| 7. | the convex part of something: the back of a hill; the back of a ship |
| 8. | something that supports, covers, or strengthens the rear of an object |
| 9. | ball games |
| a. a mainly defensive player behind a forward | |
| b. the position of such a player | |
| 10. | the part of a book to which the pages are glued or that joins the covers |
| 11. | mining |
| a. the side of a passage or layer nearest the surface | |
| b. the earth between that level and the next | |
| 12. | Compare bed the upper surface of a joist, rafter, slate, tile, etc, when in position |
| 13. | at one's back behind, esp in support or pursuit |
| 14. | at the back of one's mind not in one's conscious thoughts |
| 15. | behind one's back without one's knowledge; secretly or deceitfully |
| 16. | break one's back to overwork or work very hard |
| 17. | break the back of to complete the greatest or hardest part of (a task) |
| 18. | on one's back, flat on one's back incapacitated, esp through illness |
| 19. | informal get off someone's back to stop criticizing or pestering someone |
| 20. | have on one's back to be burdened with |
| 21. | informal on someone's back criticizing or pestering someone |
| 22. | put one's back into to devote all one's strength to (a task) |
| 23. | put someone's back up, get someone's back up to annoy someone |
| 24. | see the back of to be rid of |
| 25. | back of beyond |
| a. the back of beyond a very remote place | |
| b. (Austral) in such a place (esp in the phrase out back of beyond) | |
| 26. | turn one's back on |
| a. to turn away from in anger or contempt | |
| b. to refuse to help; abandon | |
| 27. | with one's back to the wall in a difficult or desperate situation |
| —vb | |
| 28. | (also intr) to move or cause to move backwards |
| 29. | to provide support, money, or encouragement for (a person, enterprise, etc) |
| 30. | to bet on the success of: to back a horse |
| 31. | to provide with a back, backing, or lining |
| 32. | to provide with a music accompaniment: a soloist backed by an orchestra |
| 33. | to provide a background for; be at the back of: mountains back the town |
| 34. | to countersign or endorse |
| 35. | archaic to mount the back of |
| 36. | (intr; |
| 37. | (intr) See veer (of the wind) to change direction in an anticlockwise direction in the northern hemisphere and a clockwise direction in the southern |
| 38. | nautical to position (a sail) so that the wind presses on its opposite side |
| 39. | back and fill |
| a. nautical to manoeuvre the sails by alternately filling and emptying them of wind to navigate in a narrow place | |
| b. to vacillate in one's opinion | |
| —adj | |
| 40. | situated behind: a back lane |
| 41. | of the past: back issues of a magazine |
| 42. | owing from an earlier date: back rent |
| 43. | chiefly (US), (Austral), (NZ) remote: back country |
| 44. | (of a road) not direct |
| 45. | moving in a backward direction: back current |
| 46. | phonetics of, relating to, or denoting a vowel articulated with the tongue retracted towards the soft palate, as for the vowels in English hard, fall, hot, full, fool |
| —adv | |
| 47. | at, to, or towards the rear; away from something considered to be the front; backwards; behind |
| 48. | in, to, or towards the original starting point, place, or condition: to go back home; put the book back; my headache has come back |
| 49. | in or into the past: to look back on one's childhood |
| 50. | in reply, repayment, or retaliation: to hit someone back; pay back a debt; to answer back |
| 51. | in check: the dam holds back the water |
| 52. | in concealment; in reserve: to keep something back; to hold back information |
| 53. | back and forth to and fro |
| 54. | back to front |
| a. in reverse | |
| b. in disorder | |
| Related: dorsal | |
| [Old English bæc; related to Old Norse bak, Old Frisian bek, Old High German bah] | |
back (bāk)
n.
The posterior portion of the trunk of the human body between the neck and the pelvis; the dorsum.
The backbone or spine.
back definition
|
back and forth
Also, backward(s) and forward(s). To and fro, moving in one direction and then the opposite and so making no progress in either. For example, The clock pendulum swung back and forth. The term is also used figuratively, as in The lawyers argued the point backwards and forwards for an entire week. [c. 1600]