backtrack
See also: back-track
English
editEtymology
editPronunciation
editNoun
editbacktrack (plural backtracks)
- the act of backtracking
Translations
editthe act of backtracking
Verb
editbacktrack (third-person singular simple present backtracks, present participle backtracking, simple past and past participle backtracked)
- To retrace one's steps.
- I dropped my sunglasses and had to backtrack to find them.
- 2008, Lauren Beukes, Moxyland - Page 86:
- Trophy in paw, I invest another hour twenty backtracking to find my original spawn-in spot, and reduce Fluffoki and her little friendlings to so much dead flesh, although sorry to say, it being a kids' game, they die in splatters of sparks rather than [...]
- To repeat or review work already done.
- If we backtrack through this problem, maybe we can figure out where we went wrong.
- (aviation) To taxi down an active runway in the opposite direction to that being used for takeoff.
- Speedbird One: enter and backtrack Runway 27 Left.
- To exercise a racehorse around the racetrack in the opposite direction to that in which races are run.
- To go back on or withdraw a statement.
- 2020 August 22, Adam Kilgore, “Baseball’s unwritten rules may be softening, but they haven’t gone away”, in The Washington Post[1]:
- Woodward’s mild rebuke of Tatis received backlash from most players who spoke out, and even Woodward backtracked and reexplained himself the next day.
- 2022 December 1, Ryan Pearson, “Nintendo Backtracks On Claim They Didn't Hear Of Performance Issues In 'Pokémon Scarlet & Violet' And Releases Much-Needed Patch”, in Bounding Into Comics[2], archived from the original on 2023-01-05:
- 2024 October 6, Justine McDaniel and Anumita Kaur, “Harris’s own ballot will include crime measure dividing Democrats in Calif.”, in The Washington Post[3]:
- “You saw the disaster that followed when Trump spoke out against the Florida [amendment],” said Trish Crouse, a political science professor at the University of New Haven. “He found himself having to backtrack and reexplain himself.”
Derived terms
edit- backtracker
- backtracking (noun)
Translations
editretracing one's steps
|
reviewing previous work
taxiing the opposite way down a runway
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