retrograde
Meanings
adj
- Directed or moving backwards in relation to the normal or previous direction of travel; retreating.
- Reverting to an inferior or less developed state; declining, regressing.
- Of an animal: appearing to regress to a less developed form during its lifetime.
- Of the order of something: inverse, reverse.
- Having a passage of music played backwards.
- Of ideas or a person: opposing social reform, favouring the maintenance of the status quo; conservative.
- Involving a return to or a retracing of a previous course of travel.
- Counterproductive to a desired outcome; contradictory, contrary.
- Of a celestial body orbiting another: in the opposite direction to the orbited body's spin.
- Of a celestial body: seeming to move across the sky in the opposite direction from its ordinary movement.
- Of a metamorphic change: resulting from a decrease in pressure or temperature.
- Of amnesia: relating to the period leading up to the episode which caused it.
adv
- In a reverse direction; backwards.
noun
- A movement backwards or opposite to the intended or normal motion.
- The apparent movement of a planet across the sky in the opposite direction from its ordinary movement.
- One who opposes social reform, favouring the maintenance of the status quo; a conservative.
- One who reneges on an agreement, or switches loyalties; a rebel, a renegade.
- The reversal of a melody so that what is played first in the original melody is played last, and what is played last in the original melody is played first.
verb
- To cause (a land feature such as a coastline or waterfall) to undergo retrogradation, that is, to travel in the direction of the land or upstream due to erosion.
- To change (minerals, rocks, etc.) metamorphically through a decrease in pressure or temperature.
- To cause (someone or something) to revert to an inferior or less developed state.
- To revert to an inferior or less developed state; to decline, to regress.
- Of a celestial body, especially a planet: to show retrogradation; to seem to move across the sky in the opposite direction from its ordinary movement.
- Of a land feature: to travel in the direction of the land or upstream due to erosion.
- To retreat or withdraw from a position.
- To move backwards; to recede.
- Of the telling of an incident, etc.: to move to an earlier time.
Pronunciation
Word forms
Etymology
The adjective is derived from Middle English retrograd, retrograde (“of a planet: appearing to move in a direction opposite to the order of the zodiac signs, retrograde; unfortunate”), from Middle French retrograde and Old French retrograde (“of a celestial object: appearing to move backwards; moving backwards; reverse; palindromic; opposed to change”) (modern French rétrograde), and from their etymon Latin retrōgradus (“of a celestial object: appearing to move backwards”) (compare Late Latin retrōgradus (“reverse; palindromic”)), from retrō (“back, backwards; behind; before, formerly”) + gradus (“pace, step”). By surface analysis, retro- + -grade. The adverb and noun are derived from the adjective.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Related words
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Translations
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