Results for: returner to former faith, turn back, incline backwards
English English
returner to former faith, turn back, incline backwardsretrovert
(about a motor vehicle) be involved in a situation in which a vehicle turns less sharply than desired because the front wheels slide during a turn, (about a motor vehicle) condition in which a vehicle turns less sharply than desired because the front w...understeer
(Botany) in a hydrotropic manner (tendency to turn toward or be influenced by moisture)hydrotropically
(British slang) rugby, type of ball game, variety of football in which players must advance to the goal without passing the ball forward (kicking and backwards or lateral passes are permitted)rugger
(British spelling for reflection) act of casting back a mirror image; act of sending back energy from a surface; state of being reflected; image that is reflected; idea, concept; thought, notion; act of placing blame, accusationreflexion
(Football) player who is stationed farthest behind the scrimmage line; position played by the tailback, offensive backtailback
(from Latin meaning "in the work cited") refers back to a source previously indicatedop.cit (opere citato)
(in Dominoes) bank of dominoes that remains after each player has taken a turn; cemetery; place where bones of wild animals are collected; place where old vehicles are stored and used for scrap metal (cars, planes, etc.), place for discarded objectsboneyard
(Informal) abrupt reversal or change (esp. of opinion); back flip; sound of something flapping; backless thong sandal; circuit that can toggle between two modes (Electronics), backless sandal, backward flip, change of mind, change opinion, circuit with...flip-flop
(Linguistics) repetition of a word or phrase at the start of successive phrases (usually for emphasis), part of Communion, referring back, repetition for effectanaphora
(Mining) incline from a vertical position (of a fault or vein), angle of a fault plane, slope from the verticalhade
(Nautical) forward edge of a sail; wide part near the bow of a boat, flap, front edge of sail, sail too close to wind, turn a ship toward the wind (Nautical)luff
(Nautical, Aeronautics) toward the back, toward the rear; backwards, behind boat, in or to the stern, with stern foremostastern
(of a coin) having the top or the back facing up (as opposed to tails)heads
(Slang) to repulse, disgust (e.g.: "You disgust me, you really turn me off")turn-off
 

Translations: 115 / 810

Your Recent Searches

Total number of language pairs: 544
Total number of translations (in millions): 15.4

Recent searches