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    Set·back
    /ˈsetˌbak/

    noun

    • 1. a reversal or check in progress: "a serious setback for the peace process"
    • 2. a plain, flat offset in a wall.
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  3. Learn the various meanings and uses of the word setback, such as a checking of progress, a reverse, or a distance from a line. See synonyms, examples, word history, and related entries.

  4. A setback is something that causes delay or stops progress, or a fall in prices on a stock or financial market. Learn more about the meaning, synonyms, collocations and usage of setback with examples from the Cambridge Dictionary.

  5. noun. a check to progress; a reverse or defeat: The new law was a setback. Architecture. a recession of the upper part of a building from the building line, as to lighten the structure or to permit a desired amount of light and air to reach ground level at the foot of the building. an act or instance of setting back:

  6. Learn the meaning of setback as a noun in English, with synonyms, examples, and related words. A setback is something that causes delay or stops progress, or a fall in prices on a stock or financial market.

  7. A setback is a difficulty or problem that delays or prevents something, or makes a situation worse. Learn how to use this word in different contexts with pictures, pronunciation and collocations.

  8. A setback is an event that makes you lose progress or keeps you from gaining ground. If you're knitting a sweater, dropping a bunch of stitches would be a big setback. If warring countries are negotiating a treaty, a sudden resurgence of fighting would be a huge setback for their peace plan.

  9. Setback definition, a check to progress; a reverse or defeat: The new law was a setback. See more.

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