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- DictionaryRe·verse/rəˈvərs/
verb
- 1. move backward: "the truck reversed into the back of a bus" Similar backgo back/backwardsdrive back/backwardsmove back/backwardssend back/backwardsbackpedalOpposite go forwards
- ▪ cause (a vehicle) to move backward: "I got in the car, reversed it and drove it up the driveway"
- ▪ turn (something) the other way around or up or inside out: "after completing a row of leaves or flowers I have reversed the pattern" Similar turn upside downturn overupendupturnput bottom upflip overturn topsy-turvyinvertcapsizearchaic:oversetturn inside outtechnical:evertintrovertevaginateinvaginate
- ▪ make (something) the opposite of what it was: "the damage done to the ozone layer may be reversed" Similar alterchangecountermandundoset asideupsetoverturnoverthrowrule againstdisallowoverrideoverrulevetorepudiaterevokerepealcancelrescindannulnullifydeclare null and voidvoidinvalidatenegateabrogatequashwithdrawtake backrecantretractbackpedal onbacktrack onrow backdo a U-turn oneat one's wordsdo an about-turn onvacatearchaic:recallOpposite upholdstick to
- ▪ exchange (the position or function) of two people or things: "the experimenter and the subject reversed roles and the experiment was repeated" Similar swapswap aroundchangechange aroundexchangeinterchangeswitchswitch aroundtradetransposeinvertturn aroundOpposite keep to
- ▪ revoke or annul (a judgment, sentence, or decree made by a lower court or authority): "the court reversed his conviction"
- ▪ (of an engine) work in a contrary direction: "the ship's engines reversed and cut out altogether"
- ▪ make (type or a design) print as white in a block of solid color or a halftone: "their press ads had a headline reversed out of the illustration"
adjective
- 1. going in or turned toward the direction opposite to that previously stated: "the trend appears to be going in the reverse direction" Similar oppositecontraryconversecounterinverseobverseopposingcontrastingantitheticalOpposite same
- ▪ operating, behaving, or ordered in a way contrary or opposite to that which is usual or expected: "here are the results in reverse order" Similar backwardbackwardsreversedinvertedtransposedfrom bottom to topOpposite forwards
- ▪ (of a voltage applied to a semiconductor junction) in the direction which does not allow significant current to flow.
- ▪ denoting a fault or faulting in which a relative downward movement occurred in the strata situated on the underside of the fault plane.
noun
- 1. a complete change of direction or action: "the growth actuates a reverse of photosynthesis"
- ▪ reverse gear on a motor vehicle; the position of a gear lever or selector corresponding to this: "some automatic cars are designed so that Reverse cannot be engaged unless the driver's foot is on the brake pedal"
- ▪ a play in which the ballcarrier reverses the direction of attack by lateraling or handling the ball to a teammate moving in the opposite direction: "his touchdown came after he had scampered 58 yards on a reverse with McMahon"
- 2. the opposite or contrary to that previously stated: "he didn't feel homesick—quite the reverse" Similar oppositecontraryconverseinverseobverseantithesisopposite/other extreme
- 3. an adverse change of fortune; a setback or defeat: "the team suffered its heaviest reverse of the season" Similar setbackreversalupsetchecknonsuccessfailuremisfortunemishapmisadventureaccidentdisastertragedycatastropheblowdisappointmentadversityhardshipafflictionvicissitudedefeatroutill luckbad luckdistresstribulationwoehard timesOpposite success
- 4. the opposite side or face to the observer: "the address is given on the reverse of this leaflet" Similar other sidereverse sidebackrearundersidewrong sideflip sideB-sideversoOpposite frontrecto
- ▪ a left-hand page of an open book, or the back of a loose document.
- ▪ the side of a coin or medal bearing the value or secondary design.
- ▪ the design or inscription on the reverse side of a coin or medal.
Word Origin Middle English: from Old French revers, reverse (nouns), reverser (verb), from Latin reversus ‘turned back’, past participle of revertere, from re- ‘back’ + vertere ‘to turn’.
Derivatives
- 1. reversely adverb
- 2. reverser noun
Scrabble Points: 10
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