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1 retrace
[ri'treis](to go back along (a path etc) one has just come along: She lost her keys somewhere on the way to the station, and had to retrace her steps/journey until she found them.) vrátiť sa, sledovať dozadu* * *• v duchu si zopakovat• vracat sa po stopách• vystopovat• znovu nakreslit• znovu vybavit• zrekonštruovat• zopakovat• zrekapitulovat• spätný smer• sledovat naspät• stopovat• pripomenút• rekonštruovat• nahradit• napravit• opacný smer• obkreslit• obtiahnut• odcinit
См. также в других словарях:
retrace one's steps — index return (go back) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Retrace — Re*trace , v. t. [Pref. re + trace: cf. F. retracer. Cf. {Retract}.] 1. To trace back, as a line. [1913 Webster] Then if the line of Turnus you retrace, He springs from Inachus of Argive race. Driden. [1913 Webster] 2. To go back, in or over (a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
retrace — [ri trās′] vt. retraced, retracing [Fr retracer: see RE & TRACE1] 1. to go back over again, esp. in the reverse direction [to retrace one s steps] 2. to trace again the story of, from the beginning 3. to go over again visually o … English World dictionary
retrace — retraceable, adj. retracement, n. /ri trays /, v.t., retraced, retracing. 1. to trace backward; go back over: to retrace one s steps. 2. to go back over with the memory. 3. to go over again with the sight or attention. 4. re trace. [1690 1700; … Universalium
retrace — re•trace [[t]rɪˈtreɪs[/t]] v. t. traced, trac•ing 1) to trace backward; go back over: to retrace one s steps[/ex] 2) to go back over with the memory 3) to go over again with the sight or attention • Etymology: 1690–1700; < F retracer, MF… … From formal English to slang
retrace — /rəˈtreɪs / (say ruh trays) verb (t) (retraced, retracing) 1. to trace back; go back over: to retrace one s steps. 2. to go back over with the memory. 3. to go over again with the sight or attention. {French retracer, from re re + tracer trace1}… …
turn to one's heels — retrace one s steps, go back the way one came … English contemporary dictionary
retrace — v.tr. 1 go back over (one s steps etc.). 2 trace back to a source or beginning. 3 recall the course of in one s memory. Etymology: F retracer (as RE , TRACE(1)) … Useful english dictionary
retrace — (Roget s IV) v. Syn. reverse one s steps, go back over, backtrack, reinspect; see reconsider , return 1 … English dictionary for students
To turn around one's finger — Turn Turn (t[^u]rn), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Turned}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Turning}.] [OE. turnen, tournen, OF. tourner, torner, turner, F. tourner, LL. tornare, fr. L. tornare to turn in a lathe, to rounds off, fr. tornus a lathe, Gr. ? a turner s… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
To turn one's coat — Turn Turn (t[^u]rn), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Turned}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Turning}.] [OE. turnen, tournen, OF. tourner, torner, turner, F. tourner, LL. tornare, fr. L. tornare to turn in a lathe, to rounds off, fr. tornus a lathe, Gr. ? a turner s… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English