turn back
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See also: turnback
English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Verb
[edit]turn back (third-person singular simple present turns back, present participle turning back, simple past and past participle turned back)
- (intransitive) To reverse direction and retrace one's steps.
- Synonyms: about turn, about face
- Realising he had forgotten his briefcase, he turned back and re-entered the office.
- 1914 November, Louis Joseph Vance, “An Outsider […]”, in Munsey’s Magazine, volume LIII, number II, New York, N.Y.: The Frank A[ndrew] Munsey Company, […], published 1915, →OCLC, chapter III (Accessory After the Fact), page 382, column 1:
- Turning back, then, toward the basement staircase, she began to grope her way through blinding darkness, but had taken only a few uncertain steps when, of a sudden, she stopped short and for a little stood like a stricken thing, quite motionless save that she quaked to her very marrow in the grasp of a great and enervating fear.
- (transitive) To cause to reverse direction and retrace one's steps.
- The barrage of machine-gun fire turned back the encroaching soldiers.
- 1951 February, “Notes and News: Lynton & Barnstaple Remains”, in Railway Magazine, page 136:
- Pilton Yard, the Lynton & Barnstaple headquarters, has been taken over by a fur trading firm, and would-be trespassers to the old engine-shed are turned back by the pungent odour of heaps of carcases.
- To return to a previous state of being.
- He stopped drinking for a couple of years, but now he has turned back to his old ways.
- Once we take this decision, there's no turning back.
- (transitive) To prevent or refuse to allow passage or progress.
- Synonyms: drive away, repel, turn away, stop
- Coordinate term: kick out
- The soldiers turned back all the refugees at the frontier.
- (transitive) To adjust to a previous setting.
- In Autumn we normally turn the clocks back one hour.
- I love that song: turn back to it!
- (transitive) To fold something back; to fold down.
- Coordinate term: turn down
- When you make the bed, please always turn the sheet back over the blanket.
- (obsolete, transitive) To give back; to return.
- 1602, William Shakespeare, Troilus and Cressida[1], act II, scene II:
- We turn not back the silks upon the merchants,
When we have soiled them; nor the remainder viands.
Usage notes
[edit]- In sense 3 the object is normally a person, or group of people, or means of transport. It may appear before or after the particle. If the object is a pronoun, then it must be before the particle.
- In senses 4 and 5 the object is normally a thing. It may appear before or after the particle. If the object is a pronoun, then it must be before the particle.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]to turn back, retreat — see return
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