| a scrap or morsel of food left at a meal. |
| a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question. |
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 out | |
| —vb (often foll by of) | |
| to withdraw (from an agreement, etc) | |
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 out
Move or retreat backwards without turning; same as back away, def. 1.
Also, back out of something. Withdraw from a situation, or break an agreement or engagement. For example, After the announcement appeared in the papers, Mary found it doubly difficult to back out of her engagement to Todd. [Early 1800s] Also see go back on.