单词 | reverse |
释义 | reversen. I. The opposite, contrary, or back of something. 1. a. The opposite or contrary of something. (a) Without construction. Cf. quite the reverse at quite adv., adj., and int. Phrases 2. ΚΠ c1390 in C. Horstmann Yorkshire Writers (1895) I. 254 (MED) Þow schalt han..Feirnesse..Strengþe..Bote wrecches in helle schulden han þe reuers in bodi and in soule. a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) iii. l. 2289 Crist hath comanded love and pes, And who that worcheth the revers, I trowe his mede is ful divers. 1425 Rolls of Parl.: Henry VI (Electronic ed.) Parl. Apr. 1425 §12. m. 3 Þis matier allegged for..þe erl of Warr', proveth rather for his lord erl mareschall þan þe revers. c1432 (c1380) G. Chaucer Gentilesse (BL Add. 22139) (1879) l. 6 For vnto vertu longeth dignite And noȝte the reuerse. c1450 (?c1408) J. Lydgate Reson & Sensuallyte (1901) l. 4160 Counsayl of the wyse Dooth profyte in many wyse,..As the revers dooth gret damage. 1680 L. Du Moulin Conformity of Discipline & Govt. vii. 26 Heretofore the Bishop..left those of lesser consequence to the Deacons; but at this day just the Reverse is practised, and maintained. 1717 R. Bentley Serm. before King George 5 The Heathen Poet in the Epigram..teaches the down-right Reverse. 1790 E. Burke Refl. Revol. in France 90 The reverse also happens; and very plausible schemes..have often shameful and lamentable conclusions. View more context for this quotation 1825 ‘J. Nicholson’ Operative Mechanic 224 In the horizontal castings..the balance is in favour of the increased lengths; but in the vertical castings, it is the reverse. 1882 G. M. Minchin Uniplanar Kinematics 193 In this case the stream function..is single-valued. The reverse takes place in the case of a squirt. 1930 Amer. Jrnl. Psychiatry 864 The reverse of course is equally true of the woman with a so-called father-fixation. 1978 E. Blishen Sorry, Dad ii. iv. 64 If my father's relatives were hard and dangerous and dramatic, my mother's were the reverse: all gentle, soft, like herself. 2007 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 20 Dec. 46/2 The reverse is in fact true: the most common backboned creature on our planet is a fish. (b) With of, to, or possessive. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > contrariety or contrast > [noun] > the opposite of something contraryc1386 reversec1405 the contraverse1480 nothing less?1520 contrariety1532 negative1532 oppositive1561 different1571 diameter1579 contrariwise1588 opposition1594 counterpoint1599 oppositea1616 other thing1628 antipodes1641 inverse1645 contra1648 contrast1754 converse1786 contrariant1848 antipole1856 obverse1862 antithetic1863 contradictory1874 antipathy- the world > relative properties > relationship > contrariety or contrast > [noun] > the opposite of something > of or to something spec. reversec1405 negative1532 repugnancy1586 antithesis1831 c1405 (c1390) G. Chaucer Nun's Priest's Tale (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 157 Men may in olde bokes rede Of many a man..[T]hat al the reuers [v.r. riuers] seyn of his sentence. c1440 (?c1350) in G. G. Perry Relig. Pieces in Prose & Verse (1914) 31 (MED) Þe Ioye of heuen..es the benyson of þe pure; Than it behufes þat þe riche hafe þe reuere [read reuerse] of þat benyson. c1530 Court of Love 96 Of these the reverse may no wight approve. 1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan i. ii. 6 Our Dreams are the reverse of our waking Imaginations. 1699 R. Bentley Diss. Epist. Phalaris (new ed.) Pref. p. lxxxi The candid part of mankind will rather believe the reverse of it. 1718 Free-thinker No. 29. 1 I found that the Town-Language was the very Reverse to mine. 1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones II. v. i. 114 For what demonstrates the Beauty and Excellence of any thing but its Reverse ? View more context for this quotation 1834 R. Southey Doctor I. 141 The application which Homo makes of all this, is the very reverse to what his mother intended. 1876 G. E. Voyle & G. de Saint-Clair-Stevenson Mil. Dict. (ed. 3) 335/1 The front of the army forming a re-entering or enclosing angle, and the reverse of the salient formation. 1904 F. S. Mathews Field Bk. Wild Birds & their Music 204 The Hooded Warbler..in effect of coloring is almost exactly the reverse of the Maryland Yellow-throat. 1971 A. Smart Renaissance & Mannerism in Italy xvi. 135 There is..a calm objectivity and a cold grace that are the reverse of Leonardesque ‘romanticism’. 2004 P. Hymers New Home Builder vi. 99 This effect is known as heave, and while it is the reverse of shrinkage, the resultant damage can be just as bad. b. In emphatic use: the very opposite of. Cf. antithesis n. 5. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > contrariety or contrast > [noun] > the opposite of something > more than mere negation reverse1783 1783 E. Burke Rep. Affairs India in Wks. (1842) II. 3 Against this evil large pecuniary interests were rather the reverse of a remedy. 1860 C. A. Collins Eye-witness vi. 81 [He] will..come in for certain remarks which are the reverse of complimentary. 1865 T. Carlyle Hist. Friedrich II of Prussia V. xviii. xi. 286 A cunctatory haggling mortal, the reverse of a General. 1875 B. Jowett tr. Plato Dialogues (ed. 2) II. 28 Their tales are untrue, and the reverse of inspiring to heroes. a1911 D. G. Phillips Susan Lenox (1917) II. iv. 90 Mrs. Tucker..was snoring in a tranquillity that was the reverse of contagious. 1963 Observer 13 Oct. 15/3 He is the reverse of the popular image of a ‘surfie’ as a beach bum. 2008 E. Hess Nim Chimpsky ii. 50 Even during the sixties, he personified the science geek, the reverse of cool. 2. a. (a) The side of a coin, medal, or seal which does not bear the main design or inscription; the design or inscription on this side. Opposed to obverse n. 1.the reverse of the medal: see medal n. 4. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > money > medium of exchange or currency > coins collective > [noun] > obverse or reverse of coin pilea1393 cross and pile1584 reverse1605 averse1655 ranverse1656 obverse1658 heads1675 tail1684 endorse1688 woman1785 mazard1802 man1828 mick1918 the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > surface > [noun] > rear surface > specifically of a coin, medal, seal, etc. reverse1605 traverse1634 verso1891 the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > surface > [noun] > rear surface > specifically of a coin, medal, seal, etc. > design on reverse1605 1605 G. Buck Δαϕνις Πολυστεϕανος Pref. sig. C That coine which his Lordship shewed to me had the armes of little Britain vpon the reuerse. 1614 W. Camden Remaines (rev. ed.) 198 As for the Romans, as they did set downe the image and inscription of the Consul.., afterward of the Emperour on the one side, so they changed the reuerse alwaies vpon new euents. 1646 J. Gregory Notes & Observ. iv. 26 The Reverse a Crocodile enchained to a Palme-tree. 1739 Hist. Wks. Learned I. 87 As appears by the Reverses of two curious Medals, struck by the Samians. 1788 J. Priestley Lect. Hist. iv. xxv. 193 To celebrate their exploits on the reverses of their coins. 1817 Archaeol. 18 457 Three ancient seals, with their reverses. 1841 M. Elphinstone Hist. India I. App. iv. 471 The inscriptions, the figures, the reverses, and the workmanship are pure Greek. 1914 Brit. Mus.: Return 115 in Parl. Papers (H.C. 186) LXXI. 193 A muled groat of Henry VIII combining an obverse of the third coinage with a reverse of the second. 1961 J. Dawson Ha-ha v. 94 Life is a coin that has two sides, a reverse and an obverse. 2001 Burlington Mag. Dec. 786/2 The display in the preceding room of a series of cast medals with emblematic reverses. (b) The back of each leaf in a manuscript; = verso n. 1.In a book written in a language whose writing runs from left to right, the reverse is the left-hand page. ΘΚΠ society > communication > book > leaves or pages of book > [noun] > leaf > back of leaf backsidec1392 reverse1824 verso1839 1824 J. Johnson Typographia I. 228 On the recto of the first leaf is a wood-cut of the Virgin and Child, and on the reverse a Crucifixion. 1827 W. Scott Misc. Prose Wks. IV. 372 The reverse has been printed on the side of the leaf which should have presented the obverse, so that page 32 precedes 31. 1885 Antiquary Sept. 89/1 On the reverse of the same folio, Meres goes on, ‘So in England we have also these’. 1901 Quaritch's Catal. of Rare & Valuable Bks. No. 209 Jan. 14 On the reverse of that leaf occurs the following curious notice [etc.]. 1986 G. Uden Understanding Book-collecting (BNC) 42 On the left is the verso (back, reverse) of one leaf, on the right the recto (front, obverse) of another. b. gen. The side facing away from or not intended to be seen by the observer; the other side or face.the reverse of the shield: see shield n. 1d. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > surface > [noun] > rear surface wrong side1511 back1626 backside1645 counterfront1730 reverse1775 1775 B. Franklin London 737 On the reverse of this bill, we have a smooth sea; the sails of ships..hanging loose show a perfect calm. 1834 T. Carlyle Sartor Resartus i. x. 23/1 In looking at the fair tapestry of human Life..he dwells not on the obverse alone, but here chiefly on the reverse. 1869 C. Boutell tr. J. P. Lacombe Arms & Armour vi. 89 The hollow under the face of the boss was open towards the reverse of the shield. 1920 N. S. Jenkins & W. W. Bruck in W. A. Capon Porcelain Dental Restorations vii. 186 Fuse porcelain enamel upon the reverse of the crown. 1967 Friends May 22 (caption) Its double flowers..are a light, clear pink on the face of the petal and a deeper reddish-pink on the reverse. 1988 Renaissance Stud. 2 271 There was an established tradition of accompanying portraits with..painted reverses of allegorical content. 2006 Simply Knitting June 25/3 Use this stitch on the reverse of your work for an invisible seam. 3. The back of a mountain, hill, or mound. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > position at the back > [noun] > back part or rear > of a mountain, mound, etc. reverse1684 1684 tr. J. Donneau de Visé Diary Siege of Luxembourg 6 The two first Batallions march'd in a Bottom behind the Chappel, and two others on their Lefthand, upon the Reverse of these Hills. 1735 tr. A. de Pas Mem. Hist. & Mil. II. xxxiv. 221 The left flank extends to the Summit of the Mountain, whose Reverse might be easily rendered impracticable. 1777 R. Donkin Mil. Coll. 51 All military persons ought to know, that there are few mountains (be they ever so horrible) which have not reverses where men may pass. 1802 C. James New Mil. Dict. at Revers One or two banquettes are generally thrown up..in order that the trench guard may make a stand upon the reverse when it happens to be attacked. 1846 T. Ross tr. Count St.-Marie Algeria in 1845 vi. 198 The course of the Roman road which led from Rusgunia and descended to Salda on the southern reverse of the mountain. 1907 F. C. J. M. R. de Sumichrast tr. T. Gautier Wks. X. 44 The Little Field of the Dead..lies on the reverse of a hill that rises from the Golden Horn. 4. The butt of a lance. rare. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > sharp weapon > spear or lance > [noun] > lance > broad end of lance burley1548 reverse1819 1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe I. ix. 158* Each touched slightly, and with the reverse of his lance, the shield of the antagonist to whom he wished to oppose himself. 1910 Amer. Physical Educ. Rev. Feb. 75 The ambitious champions advanced and struck the shield of the knight with whom they wished to break a lance, touching it with the reverse of the lance for a trial of skill with blunted weapons. II. Senses relating to reversal or change. 5. a. The action or an act of reversing; a reversal. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > backward movement > [noun] > movement in reverse direction reversec1487 retrogression1604 retrogradationa1609 renversement1918 the mind > will > decision > irresolution or vacillation > reversal of or forsaking one's will or purpose > [noun] reversec1487 retraction1536 relent1580 declension1597 relentance1629 resentment1646 intercision1647 relenting1694 back-down1862 backing-down1883 back-pedalling1950 step-down1973 the world > space > direction > [noun] > changing to face different direction or turning > to opposite direction inverting1573 reverse1589 round turn1611 reversal1648 controversion1684 contraversion1706 volte-face1819 turnabout1833 about-turn1912 U-turn1915 about-face1930 U1971 heel turn1983 c1487 J. Skelton tr. Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca Historica iii. 169 They shuld contynue and perseuere in that bataill without respect of daungere or ony reuerse into theire contrey agayne. 1585 J. Banister Wecker's Compend. Chyrurg. i. xxv. 157 Pareus chuseth to preuent the reuerse, by opening the tumor with a hote yron. 1589 G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie iii. xxiii. 231 This pleasant and speedy reuers of the former wordes holpe all the matter againe. 1602 J. Marston Antonios Reuenge iii. iii. sig. F2 Since 'tis [sc. flesh] mixt together, Haue at aduenture, pel mell, no reuerse. 1660 F. Brooke tr. V. Le Blanc World Surveyed 227 Engines..so drawne and bent by cordage and wheeles, fixt opposite, that the reverse was so vigorous, they would founder..a ship. 1705 C. Purshall Ess. Mechanism Macrocosm xxxiii. 335 Captain Langford's Observation of the reverse of the Wind every Night from the High Lands. 1822 T. Cromwell Oliver Cromwell & his Times (ed. 2) iv. 137 Had this reverse of positions really taken place, the beaten army could not have retreated upon York. 1851 G. W. Curtis Nile Notes (1856) vi. 51 A reverse of relations would not appear strange, for the master is as ignorant and brutal as the servant. 1914 Outing Jan. 404/1 A sudden reverse of the motive power is almost sure to bury the stern of one shoe and precipitate the cargo..in the cold white snow. 1975 Nature 27 Mar. 290/1 Winter temperatures have been rising.., at a rate of 0.36°C per century with reverses lasting several decades. 1998 A. W. Drews Man. Hydrocarbon Anal. (ed. 6) 392/2 Samples..are analyzed until the final component has eluted with no reverse of carrier flow. b. A complete change or alteration. ΘΚΠ the world > time > change > change to something else, transformation > sudden or complete change > [noun] leapc1000 lope14.. revolution?a1439 reverse?1492 metamorphosis1548 transformation1581 earthquake1592 upside down1593 metamorphose1608 sea-changea1616 peritropea1656 transilience1657 transiliency1661 saltus1665 catastrophe1696 peristrophe1716 transiliency1769 upheaving1821 upset1822 saltation1844 shake1847 upheaval1850 cataclysm1861 shake-out1939 virage1989 ?1492 tr. Raymond of Capua Lyf St. Katherin of Senis (de Worde) ii. v. sig. hivv/2 But anone as she perceyued that worde she hadde suche a reuerse of conscience off that lesynge, that for sorowe the whiche she toke therof, She was restoryd fully to her bodely wyttes. 1728 C. Cibber Vanbrugh's Provok'd Husband v. ii. 88 This promises a Reverse of Temper. 1786 E. Inchbald I'll tell you What i. ii. 11 The next time he insults me, with his jealousy..I'll try a reverse of conduct. 1824 C. M. Sedgwick Redwood I. iii. 90 How terrible are the reverses of opinion, when those most tenderly loved are the subjects of them! 1915 H. Münsterberg Peace & Amer. v. 145 The same mental conditions favor a sudden reverse of feeling. 2008 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 21 May 16 The street patrols in the southern city represent a reverse in policy by British forces. c. An adverse change of fortune; a setback, a defeat. Also as a mass noun. Cf. reversal n. 2d. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > defeat > [noun] confusionc1290 scomfit13.. cumber1303 discomfitc1330 scomfitingc1333 discomfiturea1400 scomfiturea1400 discomfitingc1405 overthrowc1440 male journey1455 overset1456 foilc1478 discomforture1485 supprise1488 reversea1529 distrage?1548 loss1548 defeat1553 underdeal1553 discomfort1589 defeatment1598 defeature1598 rufflec1600 defeatance1608 routa1616 Caudine Forks1619 disrout1623 conviction1631 bang1644 derout1644 conquest1677 drubbing1769 check1793 thrashing1797 sauve-qui-peut1815 debacle1847 smash1888 pasting1942 the world > action or operation > adversity > calamity or misfortune > [noun] > misfortune or ill-luck > instance of misfortune or ill-luck > vicissitude reversea1529 vicissitude1631 up and down1659 chequered career1869 splendours and miseries1943 splendeurs et misères1952 a1529 J. Skelton Magnyfycence (?1530) sig. Eiv I folowe in felycyte without reuesse. 1590 R. Greene Neuer too Late ii. sig. B2 Either ruminating passions or penance, either some old remembrance or some newe reuerse. 1646 Sir T. Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica 77 The Arte of Pythagoras, who could read a reverse in the Moone. View more context for this quotation 1734 M. Barber Poems 3 Ev'n those, whose Pity eas'd my Wants with Bread, Are now, O sad Reverse! my greatest Dread. 1786 T. Jefferson Writings (1859) I. 534 How comfortable a reflection will it be, to have prepared a refuge for him in case of a reverse. 1796 E. Burke Two Lett. Peace Regicide Directory France in Wks. (1842) II. 277 Some reverses which happened in the beginning of that war. 1815 J. W. Croker in L. J. Jennings Croker Papers (1884) I. iii. 68 Buonaparte, great as he was in prosperity, was never able to bear up against a reverse. 1887 Times (Weekly ed.) 9 Dec. 1/3 A serious encounter..in which the police encountered a sharp reverse. 1911 L. Robinson Harvest 42 No, no, I can't give it up like this at the first reverse. 1970 Mod. Law Rev. 33 456 While the Registrar was successful under section 21, he suffered a reverse on another aspect of the case. 2008 Racing Post (Nexis) 26 Apr. 20 He registered his third win in four starts..to end a sequence of reverses for trainer Sir Michael Stoute. d. A change of fortune or circumstances, esp. for the worse. ΘΚΠ the world > time > change > alternation > change of fortune > [noun] > instance of peripeteia1591 traverse1601 vicissitude1631 reverse1656 peripety1705 fluctuation1712 twine1768 revulsion1832 reversal1842 1656 J. Fowler Hist. Troubles Suethland & Poland 216 But before his Commission was issued, a reverse of fortune, of a Commander rendered him a Captive. 1688 in J. Barker Poet. Recreations ii. 61 Learn from me the sad reverse of Fate, 'Tis better to be innocent than great. 1735 J. Hughes tr. Fontenelle Dial. (ed. 3) i. vii. 27 A terrible Reverse of Fortune! And pray who perform'd this noble Exploit? 1759 W. Harte Hist. Life Gustavus Adolphus II. 201 Enlivened with this lucky reverse of fortune, Todt returned to his point. 1773 J. Allen Assoc. against Established Church Indefensible 25 Let this reverse of things teach us not to be highminded. 1826 M. R. Mitford in A. G. L'Estrange Life M. R. Mitford (1870) II. 226 But what is his reverse of fortune compared with Napoleon's! 1869 H. Cowles Isaiah iii. 22 A terrible reverse of circumstances. 1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 26/1 Scott..met with that reverse of fortune which involved the estate in debt. 1991 R. Davies Murther & Walking Spirits vii. vi. 339 I have lived with them through every vicissitude, felt every reverse of fortune, swung..between good luck and bad. 6. A backhanded stroke or cut with a sword; a similar blow with the hand. Also figurative. Cf. punta riversa n. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > impact > striking > striking in specific manner > [noun] > a back-hand blow retreatc1330 rere-mainc1400 reverse1490 reredemaine1548 riverso1595 back-hand1657 backstroke1753 back-hander1890 society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > cut of sharp weapon > [noun] > stroke with sharp weapon draughtc1320 chop1362 reverse1490 slash1576 riverso1595 cuta1616 1490 Caxton's Blanchardyn & Eglantine (1962) xliii. 169 To whome he gaff a reuerse wyth his swerde. c1515 Ld. Berners tr. Bk. Duke Huon of Burdeux (1882–7) ii. cx. 377 Huon..strake the Sarasyn with a reuerse [Fr. luy donna vng tel coup dune reverse] that his hede flewe fro the body a great waye of. 1594 I. G. tr. G. di Grassi True Arte Def. sig. Eeiv When, after a right blowe, he would discharge a reuerse, he must encrease a slope pace. 1602 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor ii. iii. 24 To see thee passe the punto. The stock, the reuerse, the distance. 1616 B. Jonson Cynthias Revels (rev. ed.) v. ii, in Wks. I. 237 You haue your passages, and imbroccata's in courtship; as the bitter Bob in wit; the Reuerse in face, or wry-mouth. 1656 T. Blount Glossographia Reverse, a back-blow, or stroke, a blow with the back of a hand or sword. 1885 E. Castle tr. L. P. de Narvaez in Schools & Masters of Fence iv. 72 In fencing there are only five strokes: cut, reverse, thrust, half cut, and half reverse. 1910 Encycl. Brit. X. 249/2 From..Tappa the Milanese, you could learn how to cut..both eyes out of your adversary's face with a rinverso tondo or circular ‘reverse of the point’. 2007 A. Fluckey tr. M. Payno Bandits from Río Frío 38 They returned to the city..in a festive and noisy mood, slashing thrusts and reverses at the trunks and branches of the trees. 7. In plural. Chiefly in satin-reverses. A type of figured satin, usually made of worsted. Cf. russel n.2 Now historical. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > textile fabric > other textile fabrics > [noun] renciana1300 maidenhair1359 caryc1394 spinal1399 whitefolding1423 care1429 radevorec1430 queen's clothc1450 basselan1453 Brunswick1480 ragmas1480 haberjetc1503 redvorea1525 stockbridge1526 demigraine1540 fledge1542 pinned white1552 satin-reverses1554 beverneck1567 scamato1569 messellawny1604 brogetie1610 novato1614 fugeratta1638 barrateen1689 tamarine1691 masquerade1696 calandring1697 succatoon1703 russerine1710 stade1714 Chuckla1721 long ell1725 slay1745 vilderoy1769 succota1780 minorque1794 zebra1829 grising1866 Turkoman1881 cameline1886 lyocell1990 1554 Act 1 & 2 Philip & Mary c. 14 §1 Russels called Russelles Sattens and Satten Reverses. 1653 Acts of Parl. (1658) 270 The Wardens and Fellowship of the Mystery of Russel-Sattins, Sattins-Reverses, and Fustian of Norwich making. 1799 J. Strutt Compl. View Dress & Habits People of Eng. II. v. i. 202 There were made in the same city better russel satins and satin reverses. 1985 E. Kerridge Textile Manufactures in Early Mod. Eng. 48 Reverses were figured satins, woven with two harnesses, with damask effects, which were obtained by having one harness for the design and one for the ground. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > piece of music > section of piece of music > [noun] > passage of specific form reverse1752 ostinato1928 1752 C. Avison Ess. Musical Expression 66 Such as admit of a Variety of Subjects,..and which, with their Imitations, Reverses, and other relative Passages, are conducted throughout the whole, in Subordination to their Principal. a. Cards. = reversis n. Also in plural in same sense. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > other card games > [noun] > reversi reversis1727 reverse1768 reversi1797 1768 tr. Abbé Bellecour Acad. Play 162 (heading) The game of reverse [Fr. Le Jeu Du Reversis]. 1768 tr. Abbé Bellecour Acad. Play 162 In some places..they..play with an entire pack, in order to render making the reverse the more difficult [Fr. afin de rendre Le Reversis plus difficile à faire]. 1798 Sporting Mag. 11 318 The game of reverse..is so called, because he that makes the least tricks wins the cards, which is the reverse of most other games. 1852 tr. H. L. von Waldner d'Oberkirch Mem. Baroness d'Oberkirch III. i. 11 In the evening we played at reverses, a game that Parisian wit has made most amusing. b. In plural = reversi n. 2. Obsolete. rare. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > games similar to draughts > [noun] > reversi reversi1884 reverses1886 Othello1976 1886 Sat. Rev. 62 254/2 Reverses... It gets its name, as we suppose, from the continual turning over or reversing of the counters (or men) used in playing it. 10. The edge of a garment turned back to reveal the undersurface; the material covering such an edge; = revers n. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > parts of clothing > [noun] > turn-up reversa1382 tirvingc1400 turfc1440 turn-up1688 turnback1843 reverse1859 upturn1923 1859 W. M. Thackeray in Harper's Mag. Apr. 675/1 And what, pray, are lapels but reverses? 1866 London & Paris Ladies' Mag. Feb. 15 Fur is no longer put round the paletot, but only at the collar, openings, and reverses of the sleeves. 1914 A. Marquand Luca della Robbia vi. 251 The cuffs, and the reverses, are also varied in colour. 1996 Ebony July 94 (caption) One-piece Jersey belted dress..with black reverse on collar and cuffs. 11. Reverse gear on a motor vehicle; the position of the gear lever or selector corresponding to this. Also in extended use. Cf. Phrases 1e. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > wheel > [noun] > cog or gear > which allows change of speed or direction > reverse tumbling gear1793 reversing gear1831 reverse gear1835 reverse1882 society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > wheel > [noun] > cog or gear > which allows change of speed or direction > parts of reversing lever1822 reverse lever1839 change-speed1881 reverse1882 Johnson bar1884 gate1906 synchromesh1929 hot shift1971 preselector1979 1882 Engineering 10 Mar. 219/3 Locomotives having unbalanced slide valves are handled with the greatest ease by means of this steam reverse. 1899 Horseless Age 7 June 14/1 It has two speeds forward, and a reverse, and having the single steering wheel will turn very short when desired. 1920 R. T. Nicholson Bk. of Ford Van x. 44 Use your reverse as a brake, in addition to the foot brake and the slow speed. 1958 Spectator 22 Aug. 245/1 I started to go into reverse immediately. I backed out of the dining-room. 1970 F. Leigh Bk. of Renault R16 ii. 8 On 1965–67 cars the reverse is found inwards down by second gear. 1989 R. Kenan Visitation of Spirits 167 He slammed on the brakes. Put the car into reverse. Arced around, bashing into the Ford. 1993 Which? Jan. 31/3 Some automatic cars..are so designed so that Drive or Reverse cannot be engaged unless the driver's foot is firmly on the brake pedal. 12. In dancing, esp. waltzing: the action of moving or turning in a contrary direction. Cf. reverse v.1 10c. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > dancing > movements or steps > [noun] > step > other steps reprise1521 double1531 reprinse1531 single1531 hop1579 cross-pointa1592 trip1601 back-tricka1616 inturna1627 shorta1652 coupee1673 cut1676 fleuret1677 bourrée step or pas de bourrée1706 contretemps1706 cross-step1728 boring1775 pigeon wing1807 pas de basque1818 cross-cut1842 flicflac1852 buckle-covering1859 reverse1888 reversing1892 cross-stepping1893 box step1914 jump turn1924 moonwalk1969 coupé- 1888 E. Scott Waltz at a Glance 21 The Reverse. 1892 E. Scott Dancing 200 He thinks, ‘Now I will try the reverse’; then, dubious about a successful issue, he wavers [etc.]. 1913 E. Scott All about Boston 21 The ‘Boston’..is a series of steps or figures—such as the ordinary waltz-step, the ‘dip’, the ‘run’, the ‘reverse’. 2002 A. Moore Ballroom Dancing (ed. 10) i. 88 The last step of the Quick Open Reverse will be the first step of the Progressive Chassé. 13. American Football. A trick play in which a running player receives a handoff from the quarterback, runs behind the line of scrimmage, and hands the ball to a teammate moving in the opposite direction, thereby reversing the direction of attack. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > American football > [noun] > actions or manoeuvres rush1857 punt-out1861 goal-kicking1871 safety1879 safety touchdown1879 scrimmage1880 rushing1882 safety touch1884 touchback1884 forward pass1890 run1890 blocking1891 signal1891 fake1893 onside kick1895 tandem-play1895 pass play1896 spiral1896 shift1901 end run1902 straight-arm1903 quarterback sneak1904 runback1905 roughing1906 Minnesota shift1910 quarterbacking1910 snap-back1910 pickoff1912 punt return1914 screen forward pass1915 screen pass1920 power play1921 sneak1921 passback1922 snap1922 defence1923 reverse1924 carry1927 lateral1927 stiff-arm1927 zone1927 zone defence1927 submarine charge1928 squib1929 block1931 pass rushing1933 safetying1933 trap play1933 end-around1934 straight-arming1934 trap1935 mousetrap1936 buttonhook1938 blitzing1940 hand-off1940 pitchout1946 slant1947 strike1947 draw play1948 shovel pass1948 bootleg1949 option1950 red dog1950 red-dogging1951 rollout1951 submarine1952 sleeper pass1954 draw1956 bomb1960 swing pass1960 pass rush1962 blitz1963 spearing1964 onsides kick1965 takeaway1967 quarterback sack1968 smash-mouth1968 veer1968 turn-over1969 bump-and-run1970 scramble1971 sack1972 nose tackle1975 nickel1979 pressure1981 1920 Chicago Tribune 27 Sept. 14/2 This..was used on a reverse play and the men timed it perfectly.] 1924 Los Angeles Times 3 Nov. (Sports section) 1/4 The Trojans were completely bamboozled by one of their own pet plays, a reverse on which Jabs received the ball from center. 1937 B. W. Bierman Winning Football xiv. 176 The shift is right and the play a reverse to the left, good for 4 yards. 1988 Touchdown Nov. 16/1 Gentry's touchdown..came after he had scampered 58 yards on a reverse with quarterback Jim McMahon. 2006 Chicago Tribune (Midwest ed.) 20 Nov. vii. 2/2 They played some smash-mouth with three running backs rotating, plus some deception in the form of the reverse. 14. Bridge. A rebid in a suit of a higher rank than that of one's previous bid. Cf. reverse v.1 12. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > [noun] > actions or tactics > specific discarding1592 facing1635 pull1715 lead1742 return1742 discard1778 solo1814 underplay1850 convention1862 force1862 showdown1870 unblocking1885 false-carding1923 passed hand1924 exit1934 reverse1936 loser-on-loser1947 society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > bridge > [noun] > actions or tactics > call > bidding > bid > other types of bid ask1872 overcall1890 rescue bid1912 game-goer1913 reverse bid1915 denial1916 rebid1916 overbid?1917 rescue?1917 under-call1923 jump1927 invitation1928 score-bid1928 approach1929 pre-empt1929 one-over-one1931 response1931 cue-bid1932 psychic1932 asking bid1936 reverse1936 shut-out1936 under-bid1945 controlled psychic1959 relay bid1959 raise1964 psych1965 multi1972 splinter bid1977 1936 E. Culbertson Contract Bridge Compl. xi. 128 The bid of a higher ranking suit by a player who has bid one of lower rank is called a ‘Reverse’. 1939 N. de V. Hart Bridge Players' Bedside Bk. 132 Logically..an exception occurs when the partner forces the original bidder to reverse. In that case, the reverse may not indicate additional values. 1951 I. Macleod Bridge ii. 23 The reverse primarily shows, or ought to show, the shape and not the strength of the holding. 1993 Bridge Nov. 34/1 Bidding after a reverse is an area that many of you reading this column could well profit from studying more closely. Phrases P1. in reverse. a. In the opposite direction or manner from usual. Frequently as postmodifier: reversed. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > contrariety or contrast > [adverb] > contrary to the usual manner in reverse1639 bass-ackwardsa1865 bass-ackward1902 ass-backwards1934 backasswards1951 backassward1961 1639 R. Ward Animadversions of Warre i. xi. lxxvi. 221 This is performed as the former Posture is, at the Figure 47 in reverse. 1700 G. Keith Narr. Proc. Coopers-Hall Bristol 22 I had less Money now, than when I was a Quaker; some of them said, I had it in reverse, or to that purpose. 1799 Asiatic Researches (London ed.) 2 249 From the place of the apogee H, set off its longitude in reverse, or contrary to the order of the signs. 1820 T. Hodgson Ess. Stereotype Printing 102 The page..would become..one complete matrice, with which the plates, in relief and in reverse, could be struck. 1875 A. Helps On Treatm. Suitors in Ess. 79 Hope, an architect above rules, can build, in reverse, a pyramid upon a point. 1880 Athenæum 25 Dec. 873/1 The inedited manuscripts by Da Vinci, twelve in number, written in reverse, as was customary with the painter. 1942 R.A.F. Jrnl. 3 Oct. (recto rear cover) The contribution of experienced pilots and planes in the fight to clear our side of the Atlantic is an element of the Lend-Lease programme in reverse. 1985 P. Auster N.Y. Trilogy (1988) i. vi. 48 History would be written in reverse. What had fallen would be raised up. 2000 M. Gayle Turning Thirty li. 201 My life had been reduced to a coming-of-age movie in reverse. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > contrariety or contrast > [adjective] > opposite or opposed turneda1325 reversedc1390 contrary1413 opposeda1500 oppositea1513 inverted1563 counter1596 diametrical1613 contraposed1620 oppositive1622 averse1623 diagonial1624 contrarying1628 diametrala1631 conversive1636 Antipodian1640 converted1640 exadverse1647 Antarctic1651 Antipodean1651 antipodal1664 in reverse1694 contradictory1736 converse1794 antithesistic1801 contravening1802 diametric1802 reverse1828 polar1832 antipodist1844 antithetic1864 other-sided1879 antipodic1881 1694 W. Holder Treat. Harmony ii. 20 The Proportion by which the Frequency increaseth, is..very near duplicate.., but is in reverse, i.e. as the Length increaseth, so the Vibrations decrease. c. Military. At the rear of a body of troops, fortification, etc.; from behind. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military operations > distribution of troops > formation > [adverb] > in the rear in reverse1781 1781 A. Hamilton Let. 15 Oct. in Papers (1961) II. 680 Two columns..; the left..destined to take the enemy in reverse, and intercept their retreat. 1810 C. James New Mil. Dict. (ed. 3) Parados, an elevation of earth which is effected behind fortified places, to secure them from any sudden attack that may be made in reverse. 1834 J. S. Macaulay Treat. Field Fortification 285 One face [of a redoubt] is seen in reverse, and two are enfiladed; while one can neither be seen in reverse, nor enfiladed. 1897 Cent. Mag. June 203 Our troops were now exposed to attack both in flank and reverse. 1911 A. Gracie Truth about Chickamauga xii. 261 The rear of the Federal solid line of battle..could be attacked in reverse and communication with Chattanooga cut off. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > contrariety or contrast > [adverb] fromward?c1225 contrariouslyc1380 contrarying to1382 reversinglya1425 contrary1463 clean fro1483 repugnantly?1526 diametrally?1533 contrairly1535 in diameter1543 thwartly1558 oppositely1567 contrarily1570 contrariwise1574 diameter-wise1600 diameterly1603 reciprocallya1628 diametrically1633 counter1643 encounter1660 polarly1670 Antarcticallya1711 contrariantly1796 antithetically1816 tout au contraire1841 antistrophically1842 contrapositively1858 in reverse1869 at cross-corners with1892 1869 F. W. Newman Misc. 163 The Hungarians..are not only tall and well grown, in reverse to the squat Huns, but are politically constitutional. e. In reverse gear. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > wheel > [adverb] > in reverse gear in reverse1919 1919 Munic. Jrnl. (N.Y.) 12 Apr. 260/2 Fan belt is broken, transmission needs attention, car slips in low, car slips in reverse, clutch slips in high [etc.]. 1925 F. S. Fitzgerald Great Gatsby iii. 67 ‘Back out,’ he suggested... ‘Put her in reverse.’ 1976 S. Wales Echo 27 Nov. 5/7 He pleaded not guilty to..using a motor vehicle with a reversing light on when he was not travelling in reverse. 1992 In-Fisherman Feb. 132/2 This 4-cylinder offers very smooth low-speed operation in forward and reverse. ΚΠ 1742 E. Hoyle Short Treat. Game Whist 77 If you are weak in Trumps, you must play the Reverse. 1746 E. Hoyle Whist (ed. 6) 69 Playing at any time the Reverse, means only the playing your Hand in a different manner. 1813 J. M. Good et al. Pantologia at Whist Reverse, means only playing the hand in a different manner; that is, if you are strong in trumps, you play one away; if weak in trumps, you play the Reverse, viz. another. 1851 Bohn's New Hand-bk. Games ii.71 Reverse, means only playing the hand in a different manner; that is, if you are strong in trumps, you play one way; if weak in trumps, you play the Reverse, viz. another. 1879 Westm. Papers 1 Mar. 203 If your score is one, two, or three, you must play the reverse.] ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > contrariety or contrast > [adverb] > on the contrary thereagaina1023 here-againc1200 here-againsta1250 contra1362 againwardc1384 otherwisea1393 on the contrary (formerly by, for, in, of, to the contrary, in contrary)1393 thereagainsta1400 in the contrairc1400 in opposite?a1425 e conversoc1425 contrariwise1480 again?1531 contrarilyc1540 contrary1549 per contra1554 contrariways1588 contradistinctly1623 by or to the contrair1640 counter1662 oppositely1681 on the reverse1753 e contra1815 obversely1869 1753 A. Murphy Gray's Inn Jrnl. No. xxxvi Mr. Such-a-one is a Man of very good Sense; or, on the Reverse,..he has not common Sense. 1763 W. Roberts Acct. First Discov. Florida 39 The general paid no regard to such remonstrances: On the reverse, he ordered all to hold themselves ready to march. 1786 A. M. Bennett Juvenile Indiscretions IV. 214 On the reverse, if she would be ingenuous in her confession, he, Mr. Franklin, would be her protector. 1834 W. G. Simms Guy Rivers II. ix. 109 No indulgence led him away from his post—and, on the reverse, no post compelled or constrained him into gravity. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022). reverseadj.adv. A. adj. 1. Opposite or contrary to something else; moving in the opposite direction. a. In predicative use, with to. ΚΠ a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) ii. 2105 (MED) Thei ben the slyeste of alle..To feigne and schewe thing withoute Which is revers to that withinne. a1400 (c1303) R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne (Harl.) 11112 (MED) Þese are þo yche twey verse Þat to holynes are reuers. 1680 Oliver Cromwell's Ghost at St. James's (single sheet) He hoped to see..an Upright set of M—rs appointed in their Room, who will behave in a manner Reverse to the Former. 1687 W. D. Knight tr. B. Le B. de Fontenelle Disc. Plurality of Worlds 26 I see in general that in the Moon they have a month reverse to ours. a1742 T. Story Jrnl. of Life (1747) 127 This was reverse to a Report formerly invented against William Penn, that he himself was a Jesuit. 1762 J. Woolman Wks. (1840) 225 Others choose that which..proves utterly reverse to true happiness. 1829 S. Winter & E. Vince Mystic Wreath 66 That which is reverse to old. 1895 Wales Jan. 11/2 They pass between rollers covered with sheep's skin,—the motion of the wheels being reverse to that of the plates. 1919 Ann. Rep. Virginia Polytechnic Inst. Agric. Exper. Station 1917–18 37 Late fall applications of dry salt are more advisable than earlier ones. This is reverse to the treatments with sodium arsenite and nitrate of soda. 1962 Plant Physiol. 37 527/1 Transport toward the lower incision occurred therefore in a direction reverse to the direction of flow under natural conditions. 1994 H. Y. H. Zhao in E. Hung Paradoxes in Trad. Chinese Lit. iv. 109 This is reverse to the traditional concept that formal elements are an attractive decoration to make the moral logic more palatable. b. Without construction. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > contrariety or contrast > [adjective] contrarious1340 contraryc1340 contrairc1400 repugnant1425 reverse1481 contrariant1530 cross1565 obversant1579 thwart1601 retrogradea1616 pugnant1645 antipathic1830 antithetical1848 1481 (a1470) J. Tiptoft tr. Buonaccorso da Montemagno's Declam. Honoure in tr. Cicero De Amicicia (Caxton) sig. e8 Theyr childeren..ben of reuerse condicions ffor lyke wise as theyr faders dyde embelysshe alle this cyte, So they spotten and defowlen the same. 1532 (c1385) Usk's Test. Loue in Wks. G. Chaucer iii. f. ccclviiiv Which thinges ben more reuers than comen & gone. 1652 W. Charleton Darknes Atheism 227 Nor are we destitute of Instances, in holy Chronicles, to testify the Reverse part of our assertion. 1703 Athenian Oracle II. 400/1 He remembers a Series of Names as they follow one another, either in a direct or reverse Order. 1792 E. Burke Let. 6 Nov. (1968) VII. 288 I hear that the Bellingham story is the contrary to Truth, and happened in the very reverse manner. 1836–41 W. T. Brande Man. Chem. (ed. 5) 321 Decomposition of the iodide at x occurred, but in a reverse order. 1884 tr. H. Lotze Logic 103 The mind..employs them to form an inference which is just like the one described above, only in the reverse direction. 1933 S. W. Cole Pract. Physiol. Chem. (ed. 9) ix. 205 It follows..that the velocity of reaction is retarded by the accumulation of the products of reaction and that they induce the reverse reaction. 1950 Public Opinion Q. 13 582 The newspaper's arguments were ineffective against, or had a reverse effect upon, public opinion. 1960 Guardian 23 July 6/7 If the NFU and the RSPCA do not think that ‘veal houses’ are cruel, there are 34 children..in my class who are so much of the reverse opinion that [etc.]. 1993 Collins Compl. DIY Man. (new ed.) viii. 389/2 You can attach a hose connector which incorporates a non-return valve to eliminate reverse flow. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > wind > [adjective] > unfavourable or contrary contraryc1384 reversea1393 awaywarda1500 contrariousa1513 foul1657 contradictious1766 unfavourable1788 unfair1801 a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) vi. 1418 (MED) He fond the See divers, With many a wyndi storm revers. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > impact > striking > striking in specific manner > [adjective] > back-hand (of blows) reverse1591 back-hand1695 back-handed1889 1591 J. Florio Second Frutes 119 Hee will hit any man..with a right or reverse blowe,..even as liketh him. 1616 B. Jonson Cynthias Revels (rev. ed.) v. ii, in Wks. I. 237 Stooping ouer his shoulder, your hand on his brest,..you giue him the Reuerse stroke, with this Sanna. 1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost vi. 326 With swift wheele reverse, [the sword] deep entring shar'd All his right side. View more context for this quotation 1736 ‘Zelis’ Celenia II. vi. 565 A reverse Blow struck him just under the Chin. 4. a. Mathematics. = inverse adj. 3a. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > mathematical number or quantity > [adjective] > describing relationships between quantities > inverse reciprocal1570 reverse1594 inverse proportion1660 inverted1678 conjugate1680 conjugated1798 1594 T. Blundeville Exercises i. xix. f. 20v Proportion Reuerse differeth not from the rule of 3. called Regula [r]euersa. 1766 Compl. Farmer at Surveying In the same manner you may, by the rule of three reverse, obtain your desire. 1858 C. V. Walker tr. A. de la Rive Treat. Electr. III. 760 The quantities of liquid transported are nearly in reverse ratio to the quantity of salt dissolved. 1881 Science 1 Oct. 463/2 A force..which is in reverse ratio to their density. 1914 Biol. Bull. 27 195 The intensities of the reactions are in reverse proportion to Weber's ratios. 2003 Milbank Q. 81 317 The problems were in a reverse ratio to both the size of the community and the degree of centralization. b. Architecture and Joinery. Of an ogee or cyma: inverted. Cf. cyma reversa at cyma n. 1. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > column > [adjective] > having entablature > relating to gola or gula reverse1730 1730 A. Gordon tr. F. S. Maffei Compl. Hist. Anc. Amphitheatres 234 Nor does it cause the reverse Gulæ to appear exceedingly narrow [It. nè fa strettissima la gola riversa]. 1839 Rep. Proc. Geol. & Polytechnic Soc. West Riding Yorksh. Dec. 371 In Perpendicular mouldings the most prominent and distinguishing marks are bold hollows..; double reverse ogees are also very common. 1986 J. C. Harle Art & Archit. of Indian Subcontinent (1994) xxi. 295/2 The huge reverse cyma with petalled border. 1995 Amer. Woodworker Aug. 45 A favored arrangement was to place a molded lip, often a reverse ogee, over a large cove and astragal. 5. a. On or designating the reverse of a coin, medal, or similar object; facing away from or not intended to be seen by the observer. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > position at the back > [adjective] afterOE afterwardOE hinderc1290 hinderera1340 hinda1400 backc1490 reara1500 posterior1578 rearward1581 backwarda1616 hindsome1634 postica1638 averse1646 postern1648 postical1657 reverse1675 aft1711 retrospective1785 hindward1797 retral1822 western1829 postjacent1878 1675 J. Smith Christian Relig. Appeal ii. ix. 112 The Sanctuary-shekel..with this Inscription..on the Reverse side. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory iii. ii. 25/2 On the reverse side there was no Picture. 1712 J. Morton Nat. Hist. Northants. iii. 240 Almost in the Middle of the Reverse Side, there's one or two small peaked Protuberances. 1798 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 88 171 These divisions..were transferred, by a dividing knife, to the reverse side of my brass scale made by Mr. Troughton. 1851 H. Mogford Handbk. Preserv. Pict. (ed. 3) ii. 47 What would become of a fine Rembrandt..if subjected to violent blows on the reverse side from a weighty mass of iron? 1887 Proclam. in Standard 18 May 3/2 Every Sixpence should have the same obverse and reverse impression. 1932 Extension Mag. Feb. 24/1 This is, no doubt, a noble sentiment..but the reverse side of the shield is not quite so bright. 1981 Antiquaries Jrnl. 61 52 The earliest silver coinage to be struck in Rome..had as its reverse design first the wolf and twins, and then Victoria. 1995 Ashmolean Winter 9/1 Typically the reverse face is backed with lengths of scrap cane. b. Military. Connected with, commanding, or facing towards, the rear. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military operations > distribution of troops > formation > [adjective] > in or towards the rear reverse1702 society > armed hostility > military operations > distribution of troops > military position > [adjective] > commanding the rear reverse1702 society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > device for discharging missiles > firearm > piece of artillery > [adjective] > other attributes of artillery single1546 light1687 well-served1700 reverse1702 heavy1728 Thompson1872 1702 Mil. Dict. at Reverse Signifies on the back, or behind. So we say, a Reverse View, a Reverse commanding Ground, a Reverse Battery. 1732 tr. R. Duguay-Trouin Mem. 215 The reverse battery of the chevalier de Bauve, and de Bloye, began to play upon the batteries, and retrenchments of the Benedictines. 1879 Encycl. Brit. IX. 449/1 The ravelin has..8 casemated guns in its reverse battery of the salient. 1879 Cassell's Techn. Educator (new ed.) II. 130/1 Reverse or counterscarp galleries..are placed under the glacis, their front wall being the counterscarp of the ditch. 1911 H. W. Elson Photographic Hist. Civil War III. iv. 280 General John B. Gordon, who had successfully led the reverse attack at Cedar Creek. 2000 R. Asprey Rise of Napoleon Bonaparte ix. 88 A jubilant Napoleon was setting up reverse batteries in the two positions when he learned that General Lapoype's attack had captured the Mt. Faron defenses. ΚΠ 1826 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. IV. 299 Reverse (Reversa), when an object is viewed with its anus towards you. d. Of a view, etc.: of or from the rear. ΚΠ 1836 New Monthly Belle Assemblée Dec. 277/2 The sitting figure gives a reverse view of the dress. 1897 S. V. Törnqvist On Diplograptidæ & Heteroprionidæ of Scanian Rastrites Beds 23 Specimen showing the distal half in relief (obverse aspect), and the proximal portion in the form of an impression (reverse aspect). 1910 N. Carolina Booklet July 9 With that unconquerable desire to see he has supplied us with reverse views of many of the figures like modern fashion plates. 1956 Burlington Mag. Nov. 306 (caption) Black-glazed bowl with gilded floral decoration; reverse view. 2003 Stud. in Conservation 48 41 A small fragment..of Egyptian cartonnage..shown in front and reverse view in Figures 1 and 2. 6. a. Operating, behaving, or acting in a way contrary or opposite to that which is usual or customary. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > relationship > contrariety or contrast > [adjective] > opposite or opposed turneda1325 reversedc1390 contrary1413 opposeda1500 oppositea1513 inverted1563 counter1596 diametrical1613 contraposed1620 oppositive1622 averse1623 diagonial1624 contrarying1628 diametrala1631 conversive1636 Antipodian1640 converted1640 exadverse1647 Antarctic1651 Antipodean1651 antipodal1664 in reverse1694 contradictory1736 converse1794 antithesistic1801 contravening1802 diametric1802 reverse1828 polar1832 antipodist1844 antithetic1864 other-sided1879 antipodic1881 1828 J. Ross Treat. Navigation by Steam 164 The price of a boat ten horse power engine, single or with only one cylinder, is £400..including reverse valve action. a1860 A. Smith London Med. Student (1861) 117 Having been squirted at through the keyhole five distinct times, with a reverse stomach-pump full of beer. 1888 Lockwood's Dict. Mech. Engin. 285 Reverse Keys, keys..made and used not with the object of holding machine parts together, but for the purpose of driving them asunder. 1921 E. de Lissa in E. H. D. Sewell Rugby Football up to Date xv. 264 We are going to practise all the summer together to see if we can't bring off some of that ‘reverse’ passing, during next season. 1937 E. K. O'Brien in Bridge World Aug. 27 (heading) The reverse signal. 1961 Times 16 Jan. 3/5 Dodds was only inches wide with a reverse-stick shot. 1993 P. Mayle Hotel Pastis (1994) 270 There was a kind of reverse snobbery..about what they wore; they looked like labourers down on their luck until you saw their women and their complicated watches and their cars. b. Chiefly Printing. Characterized by, relating to, or producing an inversion of the usual arrangements of colour or tone, esp. in the form of white characters, lines, etc., against a black or dark-coloured background. Cf. reversal n. 3. ΚΠ 1875 Photogr. News 12 Mar. 125/1 The advantage of this process..is, that..one never gets reverse images, as is the case in other methods, when the undecomposed chromium has not been eliminated. 1896 Typographical Jrnl. 15 Feb. 122/1 Zinc-etched plates are an excellent medium for reverse work... Somehow, the beauty of a face of type is greatly enhanced by bringing it into white relief on a dark ground. 1947 I. H. Sayre Photogr. & Platemaking for Photo-lithogr. 27 In the..reverse method, there is no underlayer of the coating in the image areas. 1992 L. Lipman Real Estate Advertising that Works! (ed. 2) iv. 89 You should also check the newspaper's reverse printing quality before deciding to use reverse type in your ad. 2009 G. Gruman InDesign CS4 Bible xviii. 470 Reverse type doesn't have to be white on black; it can be any lighter color on a darker color. 7. Relating to or allowing the operation of engines or the movement of vehicles in a direction opposite to the usual or predominant direction. Cf. reverse n. 11. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > backward movement > [adjective] retrogate1584 retrograde1622 regressive1634 retrocessive1816 reverse1839 rearward1843 society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > [adjective] > other qualities or attributes bell-mouthed1797 reverse1839 throttled1850 reversible1852 steam-jacketed1876 multi-cylindera1884 multiple-cylinder1888 four-cycle1909 multi-cylindered1909 knockless1928 throttleable1951 multi-fuel1957 stretched1960 multi-fuelled1964 1839 J. D. Custer U.S. Patent 1,179 3/2 This lever N, I call the reverse lever. 1881 Eng. Mechanic & World of Sci. 11 Mar. 24/1 The wheel driving and the reverse pinion driving. 1900 G. D. Hiscox Horseless Vehicles xii. 242 Three speeds forward and a reverse slow speed. 1931 F. L. Allen Only Yesterday i. 7 He must remember to brake with the reverse pedal, or the low-speed pedal. 2005 D. McWilliams Pope's Children x. 130 A garden beast of a Honda with..Hydro-gear IZT wheel motor/pumps, 6.5 mph forward, 3.5 mph reverse speeds [etc.]. B. adv. In a reverse manner; conversely. Also: upside down. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > backward movement > [adverb] > reverse (-acting, etc.) reversea1393 the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > [adverb] > in reversed order reversea1393 topsy-turvy1528 preposterously1533 hysteron proteron1602 inverselya1628 inversedly1645 reversedly1649 reversely1659 reverse ways1762 ass-backward1939 the world > action or operation > difficulty > opposition > [adverb] witherc1200 contrariouslyc1380 overthwartlya1425 adversarilyc1475 incontrary1488 incontrair?a1500 contrairly1535 thwartly1558 adversatively1571 sinisterlya1600 kim-kam1603 antagonistically1610 cross1614 oppositively1622 thwarta1628 counter1643 reverse1649 counter-bias1656 contrariwise1682 contrarily1781 antipathetically1818 opposingly1842 hostilely1876 a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) v. 7658 (MED) In such wise as Avarice..Stant in contraire to Largesse, Riht so stant Prodegalite Revers. ?a1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (N.Y. Acad. Med.) f. 150 Þan þe pacient sette reuerse [?c1425 Paris turnede vp-so-down; L. reuerso] vpon a dish or vpon þe kneez of som strong mynistre be þe þiez bowed, [etc.]. R. Misyn tr. R. Rolle Mending of Life 120 (MED) Sum-tyme þa þat semys in þe hyar ar in þe lawar, & reuers. 1649 J. Milton Observations in Articles of Peace with Irish Rebels 64 The edge of thir own proverb falls reverse upon themselves. 1728 R. Morris Ess. Anc. Archit. 22 Some..act reverse to their own Ideas and Sentiments. 1819 C. Grotz Art of making Fireworks 14 Take a phial, which hold reverse the space of a minute over a bottle of dissolution of iron. 1917 T. Sollmann Man. Pharmacol. 403 It is interesting that they run reverse to the seasonal variations of acetonitrile and diphtheria toxin. Compounds C1. With participial adjectives, forming adjectives. reverse acting adj. ΚΠ 1858 U.S. Patent 20,740 1/1 Arranging a skeleton semisphere on the upper side of the upper dasher of reverse acting or forward and backward acting churns. 2004 P. Skousen Valve Handbk. (ed. 2) v. 199 Diaphragm actuators have both direct-acting and reverse-acting designs. reverse-coupled adj. ΚΠ 1923 Brit. Patent 198.769 2/1 The master controller reverse barrel may have two separate forward and two separate backward positions, i.e. forward coupled, forward uncoupled, reverse coupled, and reverse uncoupled. 1961 U.S. Patent 2,967,499 6 Shafts 24 and 26..are reverse-coupled by spring 68..to prevent over-running of the sewing machine. 2002 J. C. Whitaker & K. B. Benson Standard Handbk. Audio & Radio Engin. (ed. 2) xi. 136 Reverse-coupled 1/4-wave hybrid combiner. reverse polarized adj. ΚΠ 1913 Electr. Interlocking Handbk. (General Railway Signal Co., U.S.) xiv. 335 Normal polarized contact... Reverse polarized contact. 2004 D. Stewart Chem. Essent. Oils made Simple xii. 476 Measurements of the blood of people living under geopathic stress find reverse polarized proteins. reverse-tapered adj. ΚΠ 1905 U.S. Patent 797,027 2/2 The reverse-tapered ajutage commonly termed a ‘Venturi tube’. 2002 M. J. Madou Fund. Microfabrication (ed. 2) vii. 410/1 Laser tools..can readily engineer custom-designed, reverse-tapered, 2D and 3D structures. C2. reverse anorexia n. (more fully reverse anorexia nervosa) = muscle dysmorphia n. at muscle n. Compounds 2; also in extended use; also called bigorexia. ΚΠ 1986 New Republic 15 Sept. 26 Dr. Albert Stunkard, professor of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania, described this reverse-anorexia at a recent conference of the National Institute of Mental Health as a ‘fascinating area of future research’. 2000 H. Pope et al. Adonis Complex iv. 87 We found 16 men with prominent symptoms of reverse anorexia nervosa in one survey of 160 men from gyms in the Boston and Los Angeles areas. 2001 Straits Times (Singapore) 8 Apr. p7 The most likely victims of muscle dysmorphia or reverse anorexia are men fuelled by the desire to be bulky. 2007 Metro (Toronto) 23 July 16/4 That becomes dangerous when one is afflicted with bigorexia, a condition described as reverse anorexia or muscle dysmorphia. reverse arch n. an inverted arch. ΚΠ 1795 S. Totton Humble Representation 19 Nor has he mentioned any one hospital that he says has been built within 50 years, where any Sewer has been turned or formed on a reverse Arch at bottom. 1889 W. H. Wahl tr. W. Fränkel & R. Heyn Iconogr. Encycl. Arts & Sci. V. 315 The bottom is sometimes constructed of masonry, and in situations where an upward pressure is to be feared it is built with reverse arches—that is, arches having their concave faces directed upwards. 2000 Archit. Hist. 43 177 The object of the reverse arches was to divert the thrust downwards and thus to stabilize each pier on its own account. reverse applied adj. Electronics (of a voltage) applied in the opposite direction to that which is usual, as in a semiconductor junction to prevent significant current from flowing. ΚΠ 1902 W. C. D. Whetman Treat. Theory Solution xi. 290 The effect of the anion is considerable as long as the reverse applied electromotive force is less than the natural potential difference. 1962 J. H. Simpson & R. S. Richards Physical Princ. Junction Transistors iv. 54 This condition applies to an even greater extent for reverse-applied voltages when the current flowing through the device is very small. 2004 J. Segura & C. F. Hawkins CMOS Electronics ii. 51 Plots the capacitance..with respect to the reverse applied voltage. reverse auction n. any of various types of auction in which the normal bidding process is modified, spec. one in which the purchaser of a product or service invites bids from multiple vendors and typically selects the lowest offer. ΚΠ 1915 Archit. & Building Dec. 424 Competitive bidding nowadays is a reverse auction. 1926 Chicago Tribune 4 July iii. 2/4 ‘Reverse auction’... The firm will put the residence on sale July 4 at $33,500, and will then reduce the price $100 per day until the property is sold. 1958 Managem. Sci. 5 19 The experimenter offered to any one of three teenagers a baby-sitting job, the baby-sitter being selected at a reverse auction (lowest bidder wins). 2002 P. Kotler et al. Marketing Moves i. 15 Business buyers can run a reverse auction, in which sellers compete using a given time period to underprice one another in order to capture the buyer's business. reverse-biased adj. Electronics subjected to a voltage which prevents or significantly reduces the flow of current; spec. (of a diode) having a higher voltage at the cathode than at the anode, allowing only a negligible current to flow from the latter to the former. ΚΠ 1953 Rep. Progress Physics 16 197 The electron component would have to traverse the reverse-biased barrier at the contact. 1975 D. G. Fink Electronics Engineers' Handbk. vii. 32 When a pn junction is reverse-biased, the free electrons in the n-type material are attracted..away from the junction. 2004 A. H. Robbins & W. C. Miller Circuit Anal. (ed. 3) i. 75 Due to the high resistance of a reverse-biased diode, it is often approximated as an open circuit. reverse bid n. Bridge a rebid in a suit of a higher rank than that of one's previous bid; = reverse n. 14; (in Auction Bridge) a bid announcing a number of tricks a player undertakes to lose. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > bridge > [noun] > actions or tactics > call > bidding > bid > other types of bid ask1872 overcall1890 rescue bid1912 game-goer1913 reverse bid1915 denial1916 rebid1916 overbid?1917 rescue?1917 under-call1923 jump1927 invitation1928 score-bid1928 approach1929 pre-empt1929 one-over-one1931 response1931 cue-bid1932 psychic1932 asking bid1936 reverse1936 shut-out1936 under-bid1945 controlled psychic1959 relay bid1959 raise1964 psych1965 multi1972 splinter bid1977 1915 M. C. Work Auction under Laws of 1915 77 ‘Tiger’ Clubs and Reverse bids were doomed by the infinitesimal vote they received, but..it is not likely that the Committee..would have seriously considered measures which would materially complicate it. 1939 N. de V. Hart Bridge Players' Bedside Bk. 132 A reverse bid logically shows considerable strength when it is made in such a way that the partner cannot put the bidder back to his first-bid suit without raising the bidding to a higher level than that at which the bidder could himself have returned to the suit. 1963 Listener 10 Jan. 102/3 He lacks the general strength for a ‘reverse’ bid of Two Hearts. 1998 Times (Nexis) 11 Mar. (Sport section) After the Two Club response, my reverse bid of Two Spades was forcing to game. reverse cowgirl n. a position for sexual intercourse in which a woman sits astride a man, facing away from him; cf. cowgirl n. 3.Sometimes also describing similar positions used by same-sex partners. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > [noun] > position in intercourse > specific knee-chest position1935 missionary position1948 cowgirl1993 reverse cowgirl1993 1993 R. J. Stoller & I. S. Levine Coming Attractions iii. x. 137 The reverse cowgirl..requires the dick to bend in an unnatural direction. 2002 I. Welsh Porno xxiii. 133 The reverse cowgirl position, the classic porn shot invented to display genital penetration for the camera. 2017 Advertiser (Austral.) (Nexis) 25 Mar. (Lifestyle section) 17 Forget the Wheelbarrow, the Reverse Cowgirl and the Upside-down Lotus Blossom. No one with kids has the energy for all that. reverse curve n. an S-shaped curve. ΚΠ 1821 L. Gompertz Specif. Patent in Repertory of Arts 39 25 When the carriage goes in a contrary direction, the reverse pin works against a whole side of the reverse curve. 1915 Amer. City Sept. 181/3 There are many danger points in Portland on account of..irregular streets with reverse curves, bad turns and unsafe corners. 1929 D. N. Arms Churches of France 29 The northern nave is the original one and has the more beautiful line, that subtle reverse curve. 1977 Mod. Railways Dec. 463/1 In my experience speeds are limited not so much by reverse curves..but rather more by antique signalling. 2003 G. Diliberto I am Madame X 153 Three-inch ‘Louis’ heels shaped in a graceful reverse curve. reverse dictionary n. †(a) a bilingual dictionary giving the equivalents of English words in a foreign language (obsolete); (b) a dictionary in which terms or synonyms are given for concepts or definitions; (c) a dictionary in which the words are arranged so that they are in alphabetical order when each is read backwards rather than forwards. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > linguistic unit > lexicography > [noun] > dictionary > specific types of dictionary interpreter1607 etymologicon1616 rhyming dictionary1775 idioticon1834 reverse dictionary1838 translator1850 collegiate dictionary1872 collegiate1898 1838 Calcutta Christian Observer May 292 For a reverse dictionary, Mendies's..is the best, because the fullest yet the most select, hitherto published. 1951 Portsmouth (Ohio) Times 13 Oct. 21/5 Dr. Jacob E. Schmidt..compiled a reverse dictionary singlehandedly—while carrying on his practice of medicine! 1954 Newsweek 26 Apr. 57 To help Scrabble fans, cross-word puzzle addicts, and other persons troubled for a word ending in ‘X’, ‘Y’ or ‘Z’, a ‘reverse’ dictionary has been compiled at the University of Massachusetts. 1989 Dillons Bks. Aug. 4/1 The Reverse Dictionary can help you locate the word you are trying to find. 2003 I. Plag Word-formation in Eng. iv. 104 We then explored different ways to obtain large amounts of data, introducing reverse dictionaries, the OED, and electronic text corpora. reverse discrimination n. originally U.S. discrimination against a majority or (formerly) dominant group; discrimination by or in favour of a minority or (formerly) oppressed group; cf. positive discrimination n. at positive adj. and n. Compounds. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social attitudes > [noun] > discrimination or inegalitarianism reverse discrimination1945 inegalitarianism1966 1945 in R. D. Wilson Jim Crow joins Up (rev. ed.) xi. 132 It was also possible now to have Negro strikers for all vacant petty officer ratings without any ‘reverse discrimination’ such as there would have been if white seamen had been denied the right to strike for a higher rating just because it was desired to qualify Negroes. 1969 Guardian 11 Oct. 8/6 The Hunt report on Northern Ireland..sets its face firmly against the allocation of reserved places for Roman Catholics within the police—‘reverse discrimination’ it calls it. 1983 B. Emecheta Rape of Shavi (1985) x. 87 This is reverse discrimination. Here they think we whites are good for only menial jobs. 2000 B. F. Reskin in M. S. Kimmel & A. Aronson Gendered Society Reader 264 Claims that sex inequality has disappeared (or that men now experience ‘reverse discrimination’). reverse fault n. Geology a fault in which the relative downward movement occurred in the strata situated on the lower side of the fault plane; contrasted with normal fault (see normal adj. 8). ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > structure of the earth > structural features > discontinuity or unconformity > [noun] > fault > other types of fault heave1802 reversed fault1852 reverse fault1865 step-fault1879 ring fracture1881 overfault1883 overlap fault1883 overthrust1883 trough fault1883 thrust1888 thrust-fault1889 offset1897 cross-fault1900 tear-fault1900 distributive fault1904 cross-break1909 slide1910 strike-slip fault1913 rift1921 splay fault1942 wrench fault1951 megashear1954 transform fault1965 transform1971 1865 Mem. Geol. Surv. India 3 195 It very commonly happens that the upthrow takes place on the side of the underlie, producing..what are commonly called reverse faults. 1889 Amer. Jrnl. Sci. 138 259 The explanation of the reverse faults seems obvious enough. They occur..mostly in strongly folded regions. 1962 H. H. Read & J. Watson Introd. Geol. I. viii. 482 There is much more justification for referring to reverse faults, which involved a shortening of the crust, as compressional faults. 1989 Sci. Amer. June 34/1 The majority of structures imaged by these techniques are ‘reverse’ faults, steep faults along which the younger strata are pushed over the older beds below, like a carpet pushed up a tilted floor. reverse fire n. Military gunfire on the rear of an enemy or fortification, spec. such that the angle between the line of the parapet or troops and the line of fire is greater than 30 degrees. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > action of propelling missile > discharge of firearms > [noun] > type of firing point and blank1590 false fire1602 potting1613 point-blank1614 running fire1629 pounding1633 bulleting1635 platooning1706 sharp-shot1725 street firing1727 ricochet1740 fire curtain1744 plunging fire1747 reverse fire1758 sniping1773 enfilade1796 rapid fire1800 line-firing1802 concentric1804 sharpshooting1806 rake1810 sniping fire1821 cross-firing1837 file-firing1837 curved fire1854 night firing1856 file-fire1857 volley-firing1859 cross-fire1860 joy-firing1864 snap-shooting1872 stringing1873 pot-shooting1874 indirect fire1879 sweeping1907 rapid1913 curtain of fire1916 ripple1939 ripple-firing1940 ripple fire1961 society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > action of propelling missile > discharge of firearms > management of artillery > [noun] > types of firing reverse fire1758 vertical fire1852 broadsiding1858 map fire1922 1758 C. Vallancey tr. L. A. de la M. Clairac Field Engineer vii. 86 Flanks..would protect the intermediate Front by a reverse fire. 1828 J. M. Spearman Brit. Gunner 209 The lunettes before the bastions should..be as little advanced as possible,..that they may..be themselves subject to a reverse fire from the flanks of those works. 1834 J. S. Macaulay Treat. Field Fortification 285 Two faces will be seen by slant and two by reverse fire. 1999 T. Cook No Place to Run 208 The Canadian artillery were able..to bombard the German position in a combination of frontal, enfilade, and reverse fire. reverse flank n. Military the outer flank of a wheeling body of troops, being furthest from the pivot (pivot n. 4). ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > armed forces > the Army > part of army by position > [noun] > wing or flank wingc1400 horn1533 out-wingc1540 flank1548 point1550 sleeve1574 left1693 right1694 pivot flank1786 reverse flank1792 wheeling flank1796 1792 Rules & Regulations for Formations His Majesty's Forces lvi. 80 The sub-division or section, on the reverse flank, is the one behind which the other sub-division, or sections double. 1796 Instr. & Regulations Cavalry 118 The whole divisions then file from their reverse flanks. 1885 Times 28 Sept. 8/4 The troops first passed the saluting point in column of double companies, then repassed from the reverse flank in lines of column at quarter distance. 1961 S. N. Sen Anglo-Maratha Relations iii. 42 One of these guards was posted in the rear, and the other on the reverse flank of the army. reverse gear n. a gear which allows a mechanism to move or work in the reverse direction from usual; esp. one which allows a vehicle to travel in reverse without reversing the rotation of its engine; in later use frequently figurative. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > wheel > [noun] > cog or gear > which allows change of speed or direction > reverse tumbling gear1793 reversing gear1831 reverse gear1835 reverse1882 1835 Mechanics' Mag. July 7/1 The other improvements affect the force-pump, eccentrics, and reverse gear. 1907 R. B. Whitman Motor-car Princ. viii. 121 When the reverse gear is introduced..the square shaft is revolved in the same direction as the counter-shaft, reversing the rotation of the driving wheels. 1940 Constr. Methods Apr. 110/2 Wrecking is, in reality, construction in reverse gear. 1973 W. McCarthy Detail iii. 204 David..tried to accustom himself to the British car. He found the reverse gear and slowly backed out. 1979 Guardian 7 July 9/4 In the present era, everything has gone into reverse gear. New building is postponed, new hospitals..cannot open. 2003 HomeDIY Dec. 12/2 The key features are a reverse gear (so that the drill can be used for taking out screws as well as..putting them in) and variable torque. reverse genetics n. an approach used in genetic analysis in which a known sequence of DNA is mutated with a view to examining the effects of such a mutation on gene function and resulting phenotype; frequently contrasted with classical genetics; cf. positional cloning n. at positional adj. Compounds. ΚΠ 1981 D. Shortle et al. in Ann. Rev. Genetics 15 266 It is now possible to construct mutations at predetermined sites in a cloned DNA molecule, precisely define the chemical nature of the mutational change, and then test the functional effect of the mutation in vitro and/or in vivo. This approach to mutational analysis has been termed ‘reverse genetics’. 1995 D. J. Weatherall Sci. & Quiet Art (1996) viii. 256 This unlikely activity, which was originally called reverse genetics but which has since been rechristened positional cloning, represents one of the most important developments in molecular medicine. 2004 San Francisco Chron. (Nexis) 29 Jan. a1 Reverse genetics allows researchers to assemble designer flu viruses, using biotechnology tools to remove viral traits that make a particular strain lethal. reverse lever n. a lever for engaging a reverse gear or for putting a vehicle in reverse. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > wheel > [noun] > cog or gear > which allows change of speed or direction > parts of reversing lever1822 reverse lever1839 change-speed1881 reverse1882 Johnson bar1884 gate1906 synchromesh1929 hot shift1971 preselector1979 1839Reverse lever [see sense A. 7]. 1907 W. F. M. Goss Locomotive Performance v. 105 Operate a locomotive with the reverse-lever in its extreme forward position at high speed. 2005 Miami Herald (Nexis) 20 June (Wheels & Waves section) 1 A useful reverse lever for maneuvering around docks. reverse micelle n. Chemistry a micelle (micelle n. 1) formed in a non-polar solvent, comprising a spherical array of certain amphipathic molecules (e.g. soaps) clustered around a water droplet, with the hydrophobic part of each molecule pointing outwards (the reverse of the situation in a normal micelle). ΚΠ 1970 E. J. Fendler & J. H. Fendler in V. Gold Adv. in Physical Org. Chem. VIII. 290 In non-polar liquids the structure of micelles is generally the reverse of that in water... The formation of such ‘reverse micelles’ in non-polar solvents must..result in a lower free energy than that of the monomeric surfactant solution. 2005 Proc. National Acad. Sci. U.S.A 102 11539/2 The presence of both hydrophobic and hydrophilic groups..helps them to self-assemble as both normal micelles and reverse micelles under appropriate conditions. reverse mortgage n. North American Finance a financial agreement whereby a homeowner relinquishes equity in his or her home in exchange for regular payments, esp. to supplement retirement income (cf. equity release n. at equity n. Additions). ΚΠ 1969 J. M. Guttentag in I. Friend Study of Savings & Loan Industry IV. 1542 There are at present no institutional arrangements..whereby an elderly person can use up the equity in his house while reserving the right to live there until his death. The reverse mortgage is one possible solution. 1990 A. Zarembka Urban Housing Crisis i. 21 A relatively recent addition that is aimed at elderly homeowners, is the reverse mortgage. 2006 National Post's Financial Post & FP Investing (Canada) (Nexis) 23 Aug. fp9 Smith has a dim view of reverse mortgages, which he says should be used only as a last resort. reverse mutation n. Genetics mutation that restores a mutant phenotype or genotype to the original or normal form (the wild type); an instance of this; also called back mutation; cf. forward mutation n. at forward adj., adv., and n. Additions. ΚΠ 1915 T. H. Morgan et al. Mechanism Mendelian Heredity vii. 169 Since we know that mutations and even ‘reverse’ mutations actually occur, it would be indeed strange if only one kind of change were possible in a given locus. 1938 R. B. Goldschmidt Physiol. Genetics iv. i. 290 In ordinary mutation..reverse mutations occur, spontaneously or induced, less frequently. 1989 R. Dawkins Selfish Gene (ed. 2) xiii. 263 Cells in bottle-wrack will be more genetically uniform within plants than cells in splurge-weed (give or take an occasional reverse-mutation). 2004 A. D. Mitchell in C. Winder & N. H. Stacey Occup. Toxicol. (ed. 2) x. 248 The most extensive testing for gene mutations is in bacteria, particularly using reverse mutation assays in Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli. reverse osmosis n. Physical Chemistry the process by which water or other liquid tends to flow across a membrane from a region of high solute concentration to one of lower concentration (the opposite direction to natural osmosis) when subjected to a hydrostatic pressure greater than the osmotic pressure.In quot. 1921, referring to a reversal of the direction of osmosis by the addition of salts. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > chemistry > physical chemistry > solvents and solutes > [noun] > reverse osmosis reverse osmosis1921 1921 T. J. Moon Biol. Beginners ix. 66 Summary [of ch. ix]... Root pressure. Meaning of term. Reverse osmosis. 1955 Ann. Rep. Saline Water Comm. 1954 (U.S. Dept. Interior) i. 10 Development of membranes and procedures for demineralization of saline water by reverse-osmosis methods are provided for in several contracts. 1970 New Scientist 14 May 337/3 Laboratory experiments have shown that cheddar cheese whey can be concentrated five-fold by reverse osmosis, or separated into a high-protein product. 1990 Healthy Eating Feb.–Mar. 55/1 Most household reverse osmosis systems also incorporate use of extra fine prefiltration which removes larger particles of dirt and sediment. 2006 Place in Sun May 26/3 It is a fairly slow process, but reverse osmosis is an economic way of creating drinkable water from salty (or otherwise contaminated) water. reverse pass n. Sport a pass made to a player moving in the opposite (or a different) direction, thereby changing the direction of attack; (also) a backward pass. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > rugby football > [noun] > actions or manoeuvres scrimmaging1776 throw on1845 rush1857 catch1858 maul1860 touch1863 mauling1864 touch-in-goal1869 goal-kicking1871 throw-forward1871 sidestepping1877 handing1882 punting1882 heel1886 touch kicking1889 forward pass1890 scrumming1892 touch-finding1895 heeling1896 wheel1897 scrag1903 reverse pass1907 jinka1914 hand-off1916 play-the-ball1918 gather1921 pivot pass1922 sidestep1927 smother-tackle1927 stiff-arm1927 heel-back1929 scissors1948 rucking1949 loose scrummaging1952 cut-through1960 pivot break1960 put-in1962 chip kicking1963 box kicking1971 peel1973 chip and chase1976 tap penalty1976 1907 Strand Mag. Nov. 572/2 The reverse pass from wing to centre is not so much practised as it should be, while the reverse pass from centre to centre is very rarely utilized. 1926 Chester (Pa.) Times 13 Oct. 15/1 I doubt if I ever got quite the kick out of any situation as I did from the two reverse passes we pulled against California. 1951 Sport 7 Jan. 8/4 Ormondroyd..took a reverse-pass in fine style and went through the opposition like a bullet. 2005 C. Mitchell-Taverner Field Hockey ii. 27 Player C receives the ball and then tracks left with the ball to make a reverse pass to player A. reverse phase adj. Chemistry = reversed phase adj. at reversed adj. Compounds. ΚΠ 1951 Analyt. Chem. 23 238/2 Long-chain fatty acids..may be separated by using reverse phase partition chromatography. 1983 Science 26 Aug. 860/3 An abnormal peak was detected in a reverse-phase separation of globin chains. 2006 M. M. Houck & J. A. Siegel Fund. Forensic Sci. vi. 133 Gas chromatography, where the mobile phase is a non-polar gas. In reverse phase chromatography, the opposite is true. reverse plate n. Printing a plate on which the elements in relief are the opposite of what is usual or expected; a piece of printed matter produced from such a plate, typically having white text or figures against a dark printed background (cf. sense A. 6b). ΚΠ 1862 Repertory Patent Inventions 40 141 A reverse plate is produced for casting. 1896 Typographical Jrnl. 15 Feb. 122/1 Three-colored work is easily done in two impressions by etching a little larger than the type face, and printing in direct from the original type, the extra vacuum showing white between the solid background of the reverse plate and the type face. 1921 S. R. Hall Advertising Handbk. xv. 399 The engraver may be instructed to ‘make up a reverse plate of this’, and he will furnish a plate which, if printed in blue ink, will yield a blue background with white lines, the white being merely the paper that is left unprinted. 1971 F. K. Baskette Art of Editing (1977) v. 54 A reverse plate headline is one that reverses the color values so that the letters are in white on a black background. 1998 H. Cohen in A. Cohen et al. John S. Fass & Hammer Creek Press 30 Reverse plate printed in reddish brown within triple rule border. reverse Polish n. and adj. Computing (a) n. short for reverse Polish notation n.; (b) adj. involving or employing reverse Polish notation. ΚΠ 1960 S. J. M. Denison in Ann. Rev. Computer Programming 1 129 b + c × a, can be denoted, in reverse Polish, by bca × +. 1975 Physics Bull. May 227/1 The reverse Polish logic used on the more familiar Sinclair Scientific [calculator]. 1980 FEBS Lett. 120 294 Hewlett-Packard have standardised on reverse Polish, while Texas Instruments use an algebraic operating system. 2006 A. Robbins UNIX in Nutshell (ed. 4) ii. 54 A Reverse Polish calculator..operators and commands follow the numbers they affect. reverse Polish notation n. Computing a variation of Polish notation in which operators follow rather than precede their operands, used in some early calculators and certain programming languages.Reverse Polish notation is more commonly used than conventional Polish notation. ΚΠ 1957 C. L. Hamblin in Austral. Jrnl. Sci. 20 136 It is perfectly feasible..to use a ‘reverse Polish’ notation in which the operators follow the operands. 1985 Graphic Arts Monthly (Nexis) Sept. 90 They both use a forth-like postfix notation language, i.e., a reverse Polish notation in which the operands precede their associated operators. 2004 Pop. Sci. Oct. 96/1 The HP 12C is my all-time favorite calculator. I love its simplicity and size, I love the touch of its keys, I love reverse Polish notation. reverse premium n. Finance (a) the amount by which the price of a commodity exceeds its issue price or the value of the assets it represents; (b) a payment of a sum of money intended as an incentive to a person renting a property, where the rent of the property is higher than the market rate. ΚΠ 1864 L. Blodget Commerc. & Financial Strength U. S. 18 Up to this time, the premium on gold and exchange had not been equal, in its aggregate effect, to the reverse premium, and the depression of exchange which continued through the greater part of the year 1861. 1976 Times 18 Oct. 8/6 Letting after letting has been achieved at ‘reverse premiums’ or at figures well below asking prices. 1994 Daily Tel. 12 Apr. 26 W H Smith is considering stating how much income it derives from landlords' financial inducements to take up retail sites..payments known as reverse premia. 1996 Which? Guide to starting your own Business (new ed.) v. 93 ‘Reverse premiums’ and short-term leases are much more easily available in this buyer's market, so take your time and explore all the options open to you before you make your choice. reverse psychology n. the principle or practice of encouraging a behaviour by counter-intuitive means, such as advocating its opposite. ΚΠ 1943 San Antonio (Texas) Light 14 Mar. iii. 6/3 [His] use of ‘reverse psychology’,..the theory that the nastier and more disagreeable he waxes, the more people will want to know what he will sound off about next. 1958 Amer. Econ. Rev. 48 55 He decided to try a little ‘reverse psychology’. The next meeting notice that went out was the shortest ever issued by the Local: ‘Dont Attend! No Need to Bother!.. All We're Going to Do is Take a Strike Vote and Raise Dues!’ Result—the biggest membership meeting in the Local's history! 2005 J. Baggini What's it all About? ix. 146 A kind of reverse psychology..something like the idea that if you want to keep the attention of the one you love, you ought to neglect them. reverse racism n. originally U.S. prejudice or antagonism directed towards a majority or (formerly) dominant ethnic group; perceived discrimination by or in favour of a minority or (formerly) oppressed ethnic group; cf. reverse discrimination n.In earlier use probably not a fixed collocation. ΚΠ 1950 Washington Post 5 Feb. 5 b/5 A preposterously reverse racism... She recently told a small Charleston audience of both races that the Southern white people were sick, confused, savage, decadent, morally weak and low. 1961 Jet 4 May 22 ‘Centuries of white racism have produced the inevitable black racism.’.. Dr. C. Eric Lincoln terms this reverse racism ‘the Muslim mood’. 1996 N.Y. Times Bk. Rev. 21 July 10/2 He never adopted the reverse racism of..holding back from criticism of individual Jews he disliked or of unsympathetic aspects of Jewish life or behavior. 2007 M. Brus in M. J. Sandal Justice ix. 262/1 Affirmative action:..Liberals tend to support it, while conservatives tend to regard it as reverse racism. reverse shot n. Film and Television = reverse-angle shot n. (b) at reverse angle n. Compounds 2. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > filming > shot > [noun] > types of long shot1858 glass shot1908 close-up1913 aerial shot1920 angle shot1922 medium shot1925 far-away1926 travelling shot1927 zoom1930 zoom shot1930 process shot1931 close-medium shot1933 medium close-up1933 reverse angle1933 reverse shot1934 three-shot1934 tilt shot1934 medium-close shot1937 reaction shot1937 tracking shot1940 pan shot1941 stock shot1941 Dutch angle1947 cheat shot1948 establishing shot1948 master-scene1948 trucking shot1948 two-shot1949 bridging shot1951 body shot1952 library shot1953 master shot1953 mid shot1953 MS1953 pullback1957 MCU1959 noddy1982 arc shot1989 pop shot1993 1934 Webster's New Internat. Dict. Eng. Lang. Reverse shot, reverse-angle shot. 1935 Washington Post 11 Sept. 9/5 Director Bacon has just discovered that he needs a reverse shot—that is he must shoot the same scene from the opposite angle. 1991 Sight & Sound Oct. 26/1 Next come the close-ups of LeTour's haggling with Manuel, and some reverse shots. reverse split n. Stock Market (originally U.S.) a reduction in the number of a corporation's traded shares, resulting in a higher price per share, and often carried out to make stock appear more valuable to investors. ΚΠ 1931 Hartford (Connecticut) Courant 26/8 This company..split its stock 4 to 1 in January last year, so that a reverse split now would leave its capital the same as outstanding at the end of 1929. 1976 D. W. Moffat Econ. Dict. 257/2 The reverse split, or split-down in which a corporation reduces the number of shares into which its ownership is divided. The single word split usually refers to a split-up. 1996 Guardian (Nexis) 3 Sept. 19 After the reverse split, the number of the group's shares will have decreased by 21 per cent to 85.1 million, but their value will be higher. reverse split v. Stock Market (originally U.S.) transitive to carry out a reverse split of (a corporation's traded shares). ΚΠ 1961 Los Angeles Times 24 Feb. iv. 10/4 A proposal to reverse split the authorized six million shares of $.01 par value common stock on a one-for-ten basis was authorized by shareholders. 1972 Virginia Law Rev. 58 1482 It will be necessary to either reverse split the shares retained by the owners of the shell prior to the merger or to issue a very large quantity of share to the owners of the private company. 2007 S. M. Rice Series 7 Exam for Dummies ii. vi. 65 A company may reverse split its stock if the market price gets too low and potential investors may think there's a problem with the company. reverse stock split n. U.S. Stock Market = reverse split n.; opposed to stock split n. at stock n.1 and adj. Compounds 1c(b). ΚΠ 1948 Los Angeles Times 20 Aug. 22/4 (heading) Reverse stock split. 1956 Accounting Rev. 31 163/2 Customarily a reverse stock split doesn't affect the amounts in the capital accounts so the debt to capital ratio would be unchanged. 2003 D. L. Scott Wall St. Words (ed. 3) 316 A reverse stock split has no effect on a firm's financial and operational performance and is often designed only to boost the market price of the stock so it won't be delisted from trading on an exchange that imposes a minimum share price requirement. reverse swing n. Cricket deviation of the ball in a direction opposite to the one normally expected, often attributed to the use of a ball with a worn surface; cf. swing n.2 8g. ΚΠ 1990 Sunday Times 26 Aug. ii. 5/3 The Reader ball in use here has shown a propensity for ‘reverse swing’ according to the bowlers. 1994 I. Botham My Autobiogr. xvii. 325 Eventually after some 40 overs the effect was to produce reverse swing to such a degree that deliveries were moving about all over the place. 2001 J. Williams Cricket & Race vi. 138 There were English suspicions that the Pakistan fast bowlers Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis were achieving reverse swing by illicit tampering with the ball. reverse takeover n. Business (originally British) a takeover in which a smaller or private company assumes control over a larger or public one. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > business affairs > a business or company > [noun] > assumption of control by other company takeover1936 reverse takeover1962 buyout1976 1962 Guardian 7 Apr. 8/4 They would be in a position to facilitate a ‘reverse take-over’. 1973 Times 2 Oct. 21/3 This is a reverse takeover with GB capitalized at £12.9m against BSG's £8.8m. 1995 Gazette (Montreal) (Nexis) 5 Aug. f1 Rainmaker Digital Pictures Inc. of Vancouver obtained an inexpensive Montreal Exchange listing by carrying out a reverse takeover. 2000 S. Garfield Mauve 191 In November 1999 Yorkshire had engineered a reverse takeover of the dyestuffs division of the American company C.K. Witco. reverse thrust n. thrust which acts in a direction opposite to the usual or prevailing one; esp. thrust which acts in the direction of motion of an aircraft, rocket, etc., causing it to slow down; the condition of providing such thrust; cf. retro-thrust n. at retro- prefix 3. ΘΚΠ society > travel > air or space travel > specific movements or positions of aircraft > aerodynamic forces and concepts > [noun] > thrust > directional reverse thrust1876 vectored thrust1960 1876 U.S. Patent 185,209 1/1 The lateral thrust of one gang [of disks or wheels]..shall be compensated for..by the reverse thrust of the following gang. 1923 Rep. Internat. Air Congr. 594 (caption) The effect of reverse thrust on the gliding angle of the airplane. 1976 B. Jackson Flameout (1977) i. 20 The catastrophe resulting from one of the engines being in reverse thrust at takeoff. 2005 Toronto Star (Nexis) 2 Oct. a9 Most of the braking action is done by the wheels, with spoilers and reverse thrust only helping to slow the aircraft. reverse transcribe v. Molecular Biology transitive to use (RNA) as a template for reverse transcription; (also) to synthesize (DNA) by reverse transcription; cf. transcribe v. 1c. ΚΠ 1971 Nature 26 Nov. 178/1 This enzyme..will reverse transcribe..not only AMV RNA and synthetic homopolymer duplexes but also natural RNAs. 1987 Biochem. Pharmacol. 36 765/1 Sequence analysis of cDNA reverse-transcribed from an mRNA preparation. 2007 T. A. Brown Genomes 3 vii. 216 (caption) The mRNA is reverse transcribed into a cDNA copy. reverse transcriptase n. Molecular Biology an enzyme that can synthesize DNA using RNA as a template, found esp. in retroviruses (such as HIV); an RNA-dependent DNA polymerase. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > biological processes > genetic activity > genetic components > [noun] > nucleic acid > enzymes galactase1898 cellulase1901 nuclease1902 xanthine oxidase1905 exoenzyme1908 glucosidase1909 galactase1910 nucleosidase1911 nucleotidase1911 adenosine deaminase1913 cellobiase1919 hydratase1922 activase1928 hexokinase1930 histaminase1930 kallikrein1930 Michaelis constant1930 cholinesterase1932 phosphodiesterase1932 chymotrypsin1933 glycosidase1933 rhodanese1933 acetylcholinesterase1937 prolidase1937 diaphorase1938 aconitase1939 hyaluronidase1940 transaminase1940 hydrase1943 isomerase1943 lactoperoxidase1943 streptokinase1944 pectinesterase1945 pectinmethylesterase1945 phosphokinase1946 alliinase1947 CoA1947 phosphotransferase1948 polymerase1948 transferase1948 elastase1949 amyloglucosidase1950 transacetylase1950 transhydrogenase1952 hydroxylase1953 kinase1953 transketolase1953 synthase1954 hexosaminidase1955 translocase1957 angiotensinase1958 angiotensin converting enzyme1960 photoenzyme1960 acetyltransferase1961 adenyl cyclase1961 adenylate cyclase1962 replicase1962 ADA1963 transcriptase1963 adenylyl cyclase1964 recombinase1964 laminarinase1966 nickase1967 acrosin1970 reverse transcriptase1970 cellobiohydrolase1972 cyclooxygenase1974 laminaranase1974 primase1977 helicase1978 monodeiodinase1978 transposase1979 maturase1980 1970 Nature 5 Dec. 907/1 The detection of reverse transcriptases in human leukaemic cells. 1980 S. J. Gould Panda's Thumb (1982) vii. 80 An enzyme called ‘reverse transcriptase’ can mediate the reading of information from cellular RNA ‘back’ into nuclear DNA. 2005 N. Gershenfeld FAB 248 Reverse transcriptase..converts HIV's RNA into DNA. reverse transcription n. Molecular Biology the synthesis of DNA from an RNA template, typically occurring in retroviruses; cf. transcription n. 6. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > laboratory analysis > processes > [noun] > genetic techniques selection1837 runting1893 sex control1898 progeny test1910 insemination1923 progeny-testing1926 transformation1928 translation1955 hybridization1959 transcription1961 reverse transcription1970 the world > life > biology > biological processes > genetic activity > [noun] > genetic information storage > transmission of genetic information secondary association1931 translation1955 transcription1961 reverse transcription1970 1970 J. P. Bader & A. V. Bader in Proc. National Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 67 849 The results presented here..are best explained by a process of reverse transcription, i.e., synthesis of a new viral DNA using viral RNA as a template. 1989 B. Alberts et al. Molecular Biol. Cell (ed. 2) xiii. 754 After a retrovirus infects a cell, its RNA is copied into DNA by reverse transcription and the DNA is then inserted into the host genome. 2004 J. Playfair Living with Germs (2007) ii. 43 Viruses that carry out this ‘reverse transcription’ are called retroviruses and include the dreaded HIV. reverse video n. Computing a display technique in which the colours of some text characters and their background are reversed (on older monitors usually giving black characters on a white background), typically used to highlight text. ΚΠ 1970 Program July 178 The reverse video facility permits display of black-on-white as an alternative to the normal white-on-black [text], thus allowing additional emphasis where desired. 1990 ICL Techn. Jrnl. 7 369 Colour is a consistently more effective means of highlighting information on a display than boxing, blinking or reverse video. 2004 C. N. Prague et al. Access 2003 Bible xii. 429 You can convert text..to reverse video by changing the Back Color to black and the Fore Color to white. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022). reversev.1 a. transitive. To bring (a person or thing) into a former state or condition; to bring back to. Also with in and without construction. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > causation > [verb (transitive)] > bring (a person or thing) into a state or condition > bring back to or into a state reversec1350 reassert1692 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > backward movement > cause to move back [verb (transitive)] > lead or bring back reversec1350 remisec1500 rebring1595 the world > action or operation > amending > restoration > restore [verb (transitive)] > a thing to or into previous condition reversec1350 reforma1393 recover1393 converta1425 reduce?a1425 revolve1431 returnc1436 recure?1440 remayne1481 relieve1483 redressc1500 restaur1508 reprieve?1567 recollect1606 redeem1613 regain1624 to bring back1662 re-reducea1676 the mind > mental capacity > memory > call to mind, recollect [verb (transitive)] i-thenchec897 bethinkOE mingOE thinkOE monelOE umbethinkc1175 to draw (also take) into (or to) memorya1275 minc1330 record1340 revert1340 remembera1382 mindc1384 monishc1384 to bring to mindc1390 remenec1390 me meanetha1400 reducec1425 to call to mind1427 gaincall1434 pense1493 remord?1507 revocate1527 revive1531 cite1549 to call back1572 recall1579 to call to mind (also memory, remembrance)1583 to call to remembrance1583 revoke1586 reverse1590 submonish1591 recover1602 recordate1603 to call up1606 to fetch up1608 reconjure1611 collect1612 remind1615 recollect1631 rememorize1632 retrieve1644 think1671 reconnoitre1729 member1823 reminisce1829 rememorate1835 recomember1852 evoke1856 updraw1879 withcall1901 access1978 c1350 (a1333) William of Shoreham Poems (1902) 17 Gode..hi stronge makeþ, As hi habbeþ deuocioun And hie god fey takeþ, Reuersed. c1500 Melusine (1895) 316 I am..ouerthrowen & ayen reuersed in the greuouse and obscure penytence, where long tyme I haue be in. 1555 W. Waterman tr. J. Boemus Fardle of Facions Pref. 15 Some he reuersed into their former abuses and errours. 1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. ix. sig. I4 The knight..To his..remembraunce did reuerse, The vgly vew of his deformed crimes. 1769 E. Burke Observ. Late State Nation 8 To reverse our condition into that of France, and to take her losing cards into our hands. b. transitive. To remove; to divert or turn away from. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > space > place > removal or displacement > remove or displace [verb (transitive)] > remove or take away ateec885 withbreidec890 animOE overbearOE to do awayOE flitc1175 reavec1175 takec1175 to have away?a1300 to draw awayc1300 weve13.. to wend awaya1325 withdrawa1325 remuec1325 to carry away1363 to take away1372 waive1377 to long awaya1382 oftakec1390 to draw offa1398 to do froa1400 forflitc1420 amove?a1425 to carry out?a1425 surtrayc1440 surtretec1440 twistc1440 abstract1449 ostea1450 remove1459 ablatea1475 araisea1475 redd1479 dismove1480 diminish?1504 convey1530 alienate1534 retire1536 dimove1540 reversec1540 subtractc1540 submove1542 sublate1548 pare1549 to pull in1549 exempt1553 to shift off1567 retract?1570 renversec1586 aufer1587 to lay offa1593 rear1596 retrench1596 unhearse1596 exemea1600 remote1600 to set off1600 subduct1614 rob1627 extraneize1653 to bring off1656 to pull back1656 draft1742 extract1804 reef1901 the world > space > direction > direct [verb (transitive)] > turn (something) to a (different) direction > turn away awendOE to turn awaya1225 wryc1400 reversec1540 evert1569 avert1578 nurture1627 the world > action or operation > inaction > not doing > abstaining or refraining from action > abstain or refrain from (action) [verb (transitive)] > avoid or shun > turn aside from > cause to writhea1400 wrya1400 reflecta1500 reverta1500 withstand1508 reversec1540 declinea1555 evert1569 deflecta1575 divert1609 bias1628 blank1640 avert1697 shunt1858 sidetrack1887 ride1908 c1540 Bk. Fayre Gentylwoman sig. Bi Double Fortune, when she lyst reuerse Her slypper fauoure, fro them that in her trust She flyeth her waye. 1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene iii. ii. sig. Dd5v That old Dame said many an idle verse, Out of her daughters hart fond fancies to reuerse. 1592 R. Greene Philomela sig. C4 A finall resolution to reuerse your thoughts from this disordinat folly of loue. 1639 G. Daniel Ecclus. ix. 17 Reverse thy burning Eye from the desir'd Obiect of Beautie, though to be admir'd. a1675 J. Lightfoot Wks. (1684) I. 78 None of these strange and fearful occurrences avail with him to reduce or reverse him from his Idolatry. c. transitive. To send back to a place; to cause to revert to a person. Also with into. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > transference > sending > send [verb (transitive)] > back remit1414 renvoy1477 reverse1542 remand1579 society > law > legal right > right of possession or ownership > right to succeed to title, position, or estate > reversion > revert to [verb (transitive)] > cause to revert to reverse1542 1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes f. 189v At what tyme Alexander reuersed backe again to the sea..as many of the Macedonians as wer sickely. 1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes f. 244 The young manne with a tryce reuersed the suspicion to the mother of Cæsar, or els to his sustur. 1565 T. Stapleton tr. Bede Hist. Church Eng. v. xiii. f. 162 When they pitefully in could finde no reast there, agayne they wer reuersed into those vnquencheable flames of fier. 1570 J. Foxe Actes & Monumentes (rev. ed.) II. 1040/1 From thence he was reuersed to Ville Franche, where he was condemned, degraded, and burned. 1620 J. Speed Cloud of Witnesses (ed. 2) viii. 172 Thrice is proclaimed the ouerturning of Salomons Crowne, & reuersing it to another family. d. transitive. To hand over. Obsolete. rare. ΘΚΠ society > law > legal right > right of possession or ownership > right to succeed to title, position, or estate > reversion > revert to [verb (transitive)] > hand over by reversion reverse1599 1599 T. Nashe Lenten Stuffe 26 The newe fanglest raritie..after three dayes gazing is reuerst ouer to children for babies to play with. 2. a. transitive. To turn back the edge of (a fabric or garment) to reveal the undersurface; to trim (a garment) with some other material. Chiefly in passive. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > tailor or make clothes [verb (transitive)] > face with other material reversec1390 facec1525 c1390 [implied in: c1390 in C. Horstmann Minor Poems Vernon MS (1892) i. 336 Heore [sc. women's] Reuersede gydðs On hem are streyt drawe. (at reversed adj. 1)]. a1400 in R. H. Robbins Hist. Poems 14th & 15th Cent. (1959) 158 (MED) Somme frers beren pelure aboute, For..ladys & wenches..To reuerce with þair cloþes withoute. c1440 (a1400) Awntyrs Arthure (Thornton) 16 (MED) Sir Gawane þe gay dame Gayenour he ledis. In a gleterande gyde..Withe riche rebanes reuerssede [a1500 Douce reuersset]. c1450 (?a1400) T. Chestre Sir Launfal (1930) 947 (MED) Her mantyll was furryþ with whyt ermyn, Ireuersyd iolyf and fyn. 1568 in J. Small Poems W. Dunbar (1893) II. 322 Thre Kingis..All drest with dyamantis but dout, Reverst with gold in every hem. 1895 Windsor Mag. 1 108 The so-called ‘collegian's jacket’, opening over a velvet plastron, and reversed with the same material, is particularly smart. 1906 R. Kipling Puck of Pook's Hill 111 Being clothed in his second fur gown reversed with rabbit. b. transitive. To turn (a garment) inside out, esp. so that it can be worn with a different material, colour scheme, etc., showing. Also intransitive: (of a garment) to be reversible in this way. Cf. reversible adj. 1b. ΚΠ 1861 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. July 98 It was understood that the only unfortunate individual who tried it, having reversed the wetted side, and sat through a very long morning call looking very dry and comfortable, has paid the penalty of that one false appearance as a rheumatic cripple ever since. 1874 Punch 30 May 230/2 He..reversed his reversible coat, put on clean collars and cuffs, and resumed his way. 1964 ‘D. Shannon’ Death-bringers xx. 267 I'd put the bag of money in my outside pocket and then just a few moments later, when I'd reversed the jacket, the money would be inside. 1989 Guardian (Nexis) 20 Feb. Tweedy jackets which reversed into stitched and quilted alternatives. 1995 J. Miller Voxpop xiv. 194 It's a problem when you get old shirts and the collar wears through, but you can reverse them. 2007 Birmingham Post (Nexis) 24 Dec. 5 Reverse the jacket and trousers, put them on clothes hangers and douse with warm water for a few minutes to clean the inside. 3. a. transitive. To convert into a thing of an opposite character or tendency; to alter or change completely, or so as to act in the opposite direction; to undo. Also reflexive. ΘΚΠ the world > time > change > change to something else, transformation > change of direction, reversion > change back [verb (transitive)] reversea1393 converta1425 undo1426 unmakec1450 recommencea1513 unweave1542 mismake1575 resubstantiate1584 unspin1587 remit1591 retrievea1596 remetamorphose1598 remorphize1603 reconvert1609 unlive1621 unravel1637 relapse1652 to bring about1680 uncoin1833 unpay1842 reset1846 revert1856 unweb1882 the world > time > change > change to something else, transformation > change of direction, reversion > change back [verb (transitive)] > to opposite convert1612 interverta1639 obvert1646 refund1665 reverse1944 a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) Prol. 30 (MED) Men se the world..so diversed That it welnyh stant al reversed, As forto speke of tyme ago. a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) i. 5085 She..hir besouhte..That she wolde from Hercules translate The influence off his natyuyte, Helpe to reuerse his fame and..fate. 1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) ix. l. 444 My febill mynd my trublyt spreit rewers. c1500 Melusine (1895) 316 Oure solace, playsire & joye ben reuersed in byttir teerys & contynuel wepynges. 1642 T. Fuller Holy State i. xi. 34 I like not this charitie reversed, when it begins farre off & neglects those at home. 1756 C. Lucas Ess. Waters i. Pref. We have lived to see all this reversed. 1782 W. Cowper Hope in Poems 167 The wretch..Has wept a silent flood, revers'd his ways. 1827 D. Johnson Sketches Indian Field Sports (ed. 2) 231 This heaviness and want of appetite is soon reversed, and they become more than usually lively. 1875 W. E. Gladstone in Church Q. Rev. Oct. 28 We fear it is not likely that the Court of Rome will reverse its policy. 1926 Manch. Guardian Weekly Sept. 181/1 Mr. Churchill has reversed his former die-hardism and struck out boldly. 1944 Sun (Baltimore) 5 Apr. 10/2 The court has reversed itself, to be sure, but the reversal does not surely involve any real change in American attitudes on deeply controversial questions. 1971 P. Berton Last Spike iii. ii. 96 The brain-drain to the United States, about which Canadians had complained for more than a decade was being partially reversed by the great project of the railroad. 2003 Hairflair Jan. 40/1 Other detox superfoods include milkthistle, a powerful liver healer. It can help to prevent, and reverse, liver damage. b. transitive. To employ, perform, or do in a way opposite to the former or usual method. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > doing > do [verb (transitive)] > do not in the usual way reverse1675 1675 G. R. tr. A. Le Grand Man without Passion vii. 58 They reverse [Fr. renversent] the method of time to satisfy their desire of Novelties, they rise by night to lay wait for the Moon in her course. 1728 R. Morris Ess. Anc. Archit. 113 Let us just remark on the reversing the Use of the Table. 1739–40 D. Hume Human Nature II. ii. 338 This evidence will be still augmented if we reverse the experiment. 1833 N. Arnott Elements Physics (ed. 5) II. 53 On reversing the experiment, a pound of hot mercury will be cooled thirty degrees. 1873 J. Richards Operator's Handbk. 53 Reversing the rule, from 4 inches diameter, with 4000 feet of cutting movement; deduct 750 feet of the movement [etc.]. 1903 R. F. Foster Bridge Tactics 74 If the second discard..would naturally be understood by the partner to mean one thing when it really means another, the discard itself must be reversed. 1977 Business Week 13 June 42 d/2 The results are..sent to someone with another Datotek device, where the enciphering procedure is reversed. 1994 R. Price in D. H. Strober & G. S. Strober Nixon Presidency (2003) iv. 113 We integrated the schools peacefully. Nixon did that by deliberately reversing the conventional way of doing it. c. transitive. Printing. With out. To make (type or a design) appear as white on a black or dark background. Cf. reverse adj. 6b. ΚΠ 1960 J. Lewis 20th Cent. Bk. viii. 256 The series design covers consist of a black background with all type reversed out in white and a four-colour illustration printed on the front. 1971 R. Brewer Approach to Print viii. 102 It is surprising how many designers are unable to notice in time that black type on a dark coloured paper, or reversed out against an eye-catching half-tone is difficult to read. 1986 Baltimore Business Jrnl. (Nexis) 10 Mar. 1 We are running a lot more ads with exotic photos and reversing out the type and things like that. 2002 P. Baines & A. Haslam Type & Typogr. v. 109/1 The 625 lines of a television and the 72 or 96 dpi of a computer screen are both very crude when compared to the 1,500 dpi (and higher) resolution used for print, and this can render may typefaces unreadable at certain sizes, particularly when they are reversed out. 4. a. transitive. To overrule or annul the actions of (a person). In later use: spec. to overturn the ruling of (a judge). ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > judging > appeal or review > [verb (transitive)] > review > overturn a judgement or sentence reverse1395 control1592 overturn1842 to set aside1861 Remonstr. against Romish Corruptions (Titus) (1851) 46 The ij principle..is falsli applied to the lattere pope reuersinge the formere pope. 1843 Rep. Supreme Court Missouri 1 138 Holt succeeded in overturning what had before been the law. Parliament reversed him, by restoring the old law in form of a statute. 1883 Amer. & Eng. Railroad Cases 8 84 It would be clearly wrong, we think, to reverse the judge for giving in charge the rule prescribed by this court. 1917 N.Y. County Lawyers' Assoc. Year Bk. 175 If the appellate court disagrees with him there will be no difficulty in reversing him. 1970 Ebony Jan. 106/2 The U.S. Supreme Court had reversed him four times on cases appealed from his rulings. 1993 D. Telgen & J. Kamp Notable Hispanic Amer. Women 371/1 The judge heard and closed 21,000 cases, and..she was reversed by higher courts only 24 times. b. transitive. To revoke, annul, or cancel (a decision, act, or measure). ΘΚΠ society > law > rule of law > illegality > render illegal [verb (transitive)] > deprive of legal validity abatea1325 squatcha1325 voida1325 allayc1325 annul1395 reverse1395 revokec1400 rupt?a1425 repealc1425 abroge1427 defeat1429 purloin1461 cassa1464 toll1467 resume1472 reprove1479 suspend1488 discharge1495 reduce1498 cassate1512 defease1512 denulla1513 disannula1513 fordoa1513 avoid1514–5 abrogate?1520 frustrate1528 revert1528 disaffirm?1530 extinct1530 resolve1537 null1538 nihilate1545 extinguish1548 elidec1554 revocate1564 annullate1570 squat1577 skaila1583 irritate1605 retex1606 nullify1607 unable1611 refix1621 vitiate1627 invalid1643 vacate1643 unlaw1644 outlaw1647 invalidate1649 disenact1651 vacuate1654 supersedec1674 destroy1805 break1891 Remonstr. against Romish Corruptions (Titus) (1851) 46 The lattere pope..reuersith Goddis doom. a1425 (?c1384) J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1871) III. 342 (MED) Here þenken trewe men þat þe fend failliþ here..and reversiþ Goddis lawe. a1500 (c1425) Andrew of Wyntoun Oryg. Cron. Scotl. (Nero) viii. l. 938 Al he gert rewerssit be. c1500 (?a1475) Assembly of Gods (1896) 492 (MED) A goddes wrytyng may nat reuersyd be. 1611 Bible (King James) Num. xxiii. 20 I haue receiued commandement to blesse: and hee hath blessed, and I cannot reuerse it. View more context for this quotation a1656 J. Hales Golden Remains (1659) i. 108 It is not to be thought that Peter had rever'st with himself the confession that he had formerly made of Christ. 1727 D. Defoe Syst. Magick i. iv. 114 But the Devil and he together were not able to reverse the Blessing. 1773 B. Franklin London li. 683 If that War had taken place he would have been immediately dismiss'd, all his Measures revers'd, and every step taken to..procure our Assistance. 1836 C. Thirlwall Hist. Greece III. 141 The enemies of Pericles believed that they might overthrow him, though they could not reverse his measures. 1869 H. F. Tozer Res. Highlands of Turkey II. 284 As she could not reverse the curse..she did what she could to mitigate it. 1908 Academy 7 Mar. 535/1 The chose jugée is precisely the thing it is his [sc. a historian's] business to re-examine, and with a mind always ready to reverse a pronouncement not in accordance with better knowledge. 1998 Rock & Ice Sept. 39/2 Kenops..reversed the forest supervisor's decision to conduct a study. c. transitive. Law. To revoke or annul (a legal decision, esp. one made by a lower court or authority). ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > judging > appeal or review > [verb (transitive)] > review > reverse false verdict reverse1455 attaint1642 1455 W. Worcester in Paston Lett. & Papers (2004) II. 121 Ponynges ys qwyt..and Ser W. Oldhale ys processe yn the Kynges Bynche reuersed. 1485–6 Rolls of Parl.: Henry VII (Electronic ed.) Parl. Nov. 1485 1st Roll §21. m. 15 The said acte of atteyndour..be..reversed, adnulled, voide and of noon effecte ne force. 1531 T. Elyot Bk. named Gouernour ii. v. sig. Piijv Wherby he fyndynge the poure woman to sustaine wronges, he reuersed his iugement. 1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. cviijv He desyreth that this sentence of outlawerye maye be reuersed. 1666 S. Pepys Diary 26 Aug. (1972) VII. 261 It was hoped by the party greived to get my Lord Chancellor to reverse a Decree of his. 1689 N. Luttrell Diary in Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs (1857) I. 522 The earl of Macclesfeild hath revers'd his outlawry in the court of kings bench. 1754 Bp. T. Sherlock Disc. (1759) I. i. 45 They cannot reverse a Forfeiture once incurred. 1768 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. III. xxv. 411 Each court of appeal, in their respective stages, may..reverse, or affirm the judgment of the inferior courts. 1818 W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. (ed. 2) VI. 212 Whereupon the judgment of the Court of King's Bench was reversed. 1855 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. III. xiv. 380 A bill for reversing the attainder of Lord Russell was presented to the Peers. 1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 712/1 Lord North attempted to reverse this decision by a parliamentary enactment. 1983 K. M. MacMorran & K. J. T. Elphinstone Handbk. for Churchwardens & Parochial Church Councillors iii. 35 Any such deposition can subsequently be reversed only by a free pardon from the Crown. 2004 Amer. Jrnl. Legal Hist. 46 288 The Supreme Court upheld the right of a state legislature to reverse a judicial decree. d. transitive. To undo (a person's work or achievements). ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > doing > do [verb (transitive)] > reverse the doing of undo1426 reverse1612 unwork1726 1612 J. Davies Muses Sacrifice f. 92v Then it is thought such sixe dayes shall reuerse his six dayes Worke, that moues but, so, to stay. 1725 W. Broome in A. Pope et al. tr. Homer Odyssey I. ii. 118 The work she ply'd; but, studious of delay, By night revers'd the labours of the day. ?1827–8 R. Whately Misc. Remains (1864) 91 All the work undone and reversed at which he had been labouring. 1874 B. Taylor Prophet iv. vii. 228 What can I more?.. Reverse the advancing work, and, step by step, Make all things as they were? 1902 H. B. Workman Dawn Reformation II. v. 247 Hallum was still lying unburied when the King's agents began to reverse his work. 1971 H. L. Harrod Mission among Blackfeet vii. 102 The priest was especially offended by the way the display of Indian religion on the Fourth of July reversed his labors with children. a. transitive. To oppose, resist. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > difficulty > opposition > oppose [verb (transitive)] > resist withstandc888 withsake971 forstanda1000 to stand again ——OE withsetc1000 again-standOE to stand againOE warnc1175 wiþerhaldec1175 atstandc1220 astand1250 withsitc1300 sitc1325 asitc1330 (it) may well withc1395 reversea1400 resist1417 ofstandc1425 onstandc1425 gainstand?c1450 endure1470 obsista1475 repugna1513 recountera1525 occur1531 desist1548 impugn1577 obstrigillate1623 counter-stand1648 stem1675 repique1687 to make face to1807 to fight off1833 to stick up1838 bay1848 withstay1854 buck1857 a1400 in T. Wright & J. O. Halliwell Reliquiæ Antiquæ (1845) II. 42 For whoevere so doth, he errith in the byleve, reversith Crist, and scornyth God. c1400 J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 286 (MED) Job seiþ..þat no man reuersiþ [L. restitit] god but ȝif he haue vnpees. a1425 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1871) II. 75 (MED) Who woot how many persones assentiden to þis synne, and how myche helpe men hadden of oþers þat reversiden it? a1500 (?c1378) J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 410 (MED) Men of þes newe ordris reuersen crist as satanas, for þey leeuen þat crist biddiþ & don newe biddingis vndir his power. b. transitive (reflexive). To contradict oneself. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > equivocal quality, ambiguity > render ambiguous [verb (transitive)] > contradict oneself reverse1402 1402 Reply Friar Daw Topias in T. Wright Polit. Poems & Songs (1861) II. 86 Whi art thou so fals ffor to reverse thi silf in thin owne sawes? a1425 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1871) II. 319 (MED) God, þat reversiþ not himsilfe, biddiþ þat men shulde love þer enemyes. 6. a. transitive. To turn or place upside down; to turn over. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > inversion > invert [verb (transitive)] > turn the reverse or wrong way turna1200 misturna1350 overturna1382 reversec1400 revertc1440 inturn1573 retrograde1582 renversec1586 retrovert1782 roll1918 c1400 Brut (Rawl. B. 171) 240 (MED) Symunde of Redyng bifore ham bar her armes oppon a spere reuersede, in token þat þai shulde be vndone for euermore. ?a1425 MS Hunterian 95 f. 185 (MED) Reuerse þe bacine apon þe fume of lignum aloes and of ffraunke encense. a1500 Bernardus de Cura (1870) 282 Þan nedis thow nocht to rewerss hate na hude, To crafe þine awne bot haf it at þi wyl. 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VIII f. xl They make of hym an Image paynted reuersed, with his heles upwarde. 1637 J. Milton Comus 28 Without his rod revers't,..Wee cannot free the Ladie. 1664 H. Power Exper. Philos. ii. 96 He took a Tube or Lead-Pipe..and having filled it full of water,..reversed it into a paile of water. 1696 T. Dilke Lover's Luck iv. 33 You have been a Traytor to your own lawfull Spouse, therefore you must be revers'd. The Bullies set him on his Head, and shake all the Money out of his Pockets. 1718 A. Pope tr. Homer Iliad IV. xiii. 688 His Shield revers'd o'er the fall'n Warror [sic] lies; And everlasting Slumber seals his Eyes. 1782 W. Cowper Hope in Poems 164 No fertilizing streams your fields divide, That show revers'd the villas on their side. 1808 W. Scott Marmion i. xii. 34 We saw..On the gibbet-tree, reversed, His foeman's scutcheon tied. 1884 A. De Vere Poet. Wks. V. 401 This is that Mount which saw Saint Peter die! Where stands yon dome stood once that Cross reversed. 1902 W. G. Jordan Power of Truth (1916) 68 It [sc. procrastination] is watching the sands in the hour-glass run down before beginning any new work, then reversing the glass and repeating the observation. 1984 A. C. Duxbury & A. Duxbury Introd. World's Oceans vi. 197 The thermometers are reversed (or turned upside down) as the valves of the bottles close. 1995 B. L. De Mente Japan made Easy (ed. 2) i. xv. 126 When you have had all you want or can take, turn your cup or glass upside down.., and politely but firmly resist all entreaties to reverse it. b. transitive. spec. To turn (a coat of arms, a heraldic charge, etc.) upside down, esp. as a punishment or act of abasement. ΚΠ 1548 Hall's Vnion: Henry VII f. xliii He caused the lord Audeleigh to be drawen from Newgate to the Towre hil in a cote of his awne armes peinted vpon paper, reuersed and al to torne, & there to be behedded. 1631 B. Jonson Staple of Newes 4th Intermeane 63 in Wks. II I would haue..her Graces Herald, to pluck downe his hatchments, reuerse his coat-armour, and nullifie him for no Gentleman. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory i. vii. §49 The point Chapourn or Champaine is also reversed, and set in any of the four points of the Escochion. 1708 J. Chamberlayne Magnæ Britanniæ Notitia (1710) i. iii. iv. 190 When a Knight is to suffer Death for any foul Crime..his Sword [is] taken away.., his Gauntlet pluckt off, and his Coat of Arms reversed. 1728 E. Chambers Cycl. at Abatement In the Case of Treason, where the Escutcheon is totally revers'd, to intimate a total Suppression of the Honour. 1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe II. x. 174 May my arms be reversed and my name dishonoured..if thou shalt have reason to complain of me! 1847 H. Gough Gloss. Terms Brit. Heraldry 2 There is another mark of disgrace which is due only to the traitor: it consists in reversing the entire coat. 1882 J. E. Cussans Handbk. Heraldry (ed. 3) vi. 103 In the Arms of the See of Hereford the Lions' faces are Reversed, that is, turned upside down. 1909 A. C. Fox-Davies Compl. Guide Heraldry vii. 79 A fixed geometrical pattern, formed of rows of ear-shaped shields of alternate colours and alternately reversed. 1984 M. Keen Chivalry ix. 175 The captain of Moncontour..had slandered him with breach of faith as a prisoner of the English and had reversed his arms. c. transitive. To hold or carry (a weapon) so that it is not in a position of readiness. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > drill or training > drill [verb (transitive)] > position weapons charge1509 trailc1550 present1579 recover1594 return1598 handle1621 rest1622 port1625 slope1625 reverse1630 to order arms1678 carry1779 1630 W. Davenant Cruell Brother v. i. sig. I3 Reuerse your Muskets, and traile your stubborne Pikes In slimy-Channels. 1650 R. Stapleton tr. F. Strada De Bello Belgico x. 22 A Regiment of Foote..went before, with their Pikes and Muskets reversed. a1796 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) I. 341 Revers'd that spear, redoubtable in war, Reclin'd that banner, erst in fields unfurl'd. 1833 Regulations Instr. Cavalry i. i. 34 The officers' swords are reversed under the right arm. 1853 J. H. Stocqueler Mil. Encycl. 232/2 Arms are said to be reversed, when the butts of the pieces are slung, or held upwards. 1864 Ld. Tennyson Voyage 71 And now, the bloodless point reversed, She bore the blade of Liberty. 1908 E. P. Alsbury Guy Raymond vi. 42 Then reversing his gun to show his peaceable intentions, he rode to the campfire and dismounted. 1988 Anglo-Norman Stud. 10 51 The horseman.., with his lance reversed and shouldered rather than in a fighting position, is fleeing the battle. 2004 P. G. Jestice Holy People of World 897/2 Gerald of Aurillac..made his men reverse their swords and lances in battle so they would not hurt anyone. a. transitive. To cast down from a position of strength, power, or greatness; to overthrow. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > creation > destruction > destroy [verb (transitive)] > overthrow or overturn to-warpc888 overwarpeOE fallOE cumber1303 overthrowc1375 overturna1382 subverta1382 overwalta1400 sinka1400 to wend downa1400 tuyrec1400 reverse1402 tirvec1420 pervert?a1425 to put downa1425 cumrayc1425 downthringc1430 overthwart?a1439 thringc1480 subvertise1484 succumb1490 renverse1521 precipitate?1528 everta1538 wrake1570 ruinate1590 profligate1643 wreck1749 1402 Reply Friar Daw Topias in T. Wright Polit. Poems & Songs (1861) II. 61 Hopist thou not it was Crist, and fulfillid in him silf, in which ech religion perfitli is groundid, reversynge the soorie synnes. a1425 (?a1400) G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose (Hunterian) (1891) l. 5468 Froward fortune and perverse..high estatis she doth reuerse And maketh hem to tumble doune. c1480 (a1400) St. Julian 690 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 478 Þis cite hale I sal revers, & mak It for to bere corne. 1588 J. de Frégeville Reformed Politicke 70 Take occasion, of the equalitie brought in into Fraunce, to reuerse the estate of the Episcopall Clergie among the Reformed. a1618 J. Sylvester tr. Little Bartas in tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Diuine Weekes & Wks. (1621) 769 How often hath Hee seen Empires reverst? 1638 T. Herbert Some Yeares Trav. (rev. ed.) 103 Hee is convicted,..his honour reverst, himselfe manacled. b. transitive. To defeat by argument; to confute. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > testing > refutation, disproof > refute, disprove [verb (transitive)] answerOE bitavelena1225 allayc1275 confoundc1384 concludea1400 conclusea1400 forblenda1400 gainsaya1400 rejag1402 to bear downc1405 redarguea1425 repugn?a1425 reverse?c1430 improvec1443 reprovea1513 dissolve1529 revince1529 convince1530 confute1533 refel1534 refute1545 void1570 evict1583 infringe1590 reprehend1597 revert1598 evince1608 repel1613 to take off1618 unbubblea1640 invalid1643 invalidate1649 remove1652 retund1653 effronta1657 dispute1659 unreason1661 have1680 demolish1691 to blow sky-high1819 ?c1430 (c1400) J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 266 (MED) Þei [sc. heretics] seyn þat þe speche of holy writt is fals þat reuersiþ here owene fonnydnesse. c1450 J. Capgrave Life St. Katherine (Arun. 396) (1893) iv. 1396 (MED) I shal be strong, alle materis to conclude; There shal no man haue myght me to reuers. a1500 tr. A. Chartier Traité de l'Esperance (Rawl.) (1974) 88 (MED) By this reason the bestialte of ydolatrees is gretly reuercyd [Fr. renversee] and confounded, and the Cristen feith gloriousely wourshippid. 1581 J. Marbeck Bk. Notes & Common Places 515 Afterward he doth reuerse the arguments and obiections of the aduersaries, which he aunswereth by and by. c. transitive. To throw down; to overturn physically. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > causing to come or go down > cause to come or go down [verb (transitive)] > capsize or upset overcastc1230 overturnc1300 overthrowc1330 to-turna1382 overwhelm?a1400 tilta1400 tipa1400 welt?a1400 overtiltc1400 tirvec1420 reverse?a1439 devolvec1470 subvert1479 welter?a1505 renverse1521 tumble1534 verse1556 upturn1567 overwhirl1577 rewalt1587 subverse1590 overset1599 overtumble1600 walt1611 to fetch up1615 ramvert1632 treveer1636 transvolve1644 capsize1788 upset1806 keel1828 overwelt1828 pitch-pole1851 purl1856 a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) vi. 2316 (MED) With rage floodis..Neptunvs dide gret destruccioun, Drowned villages..Reuersed in templis of gold al ther vessellis. 1477 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Hist. Jason (1913) 9 Pyritheon with somme other began to Reuerse their metes and tables fighting with hem with pottes & platers. 1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xvi. 417 On hym arestit the Dowglass, And him reuersit. c1500 Melusine (1895) 241 Thenne..trompettes sowned, & knightes reuersed eche other. 1577 R. Holinshed Chron. II. 991/1 The Prince..caused the walles to be vndermined, and quite reuersed into the ditch. c1600 in G. Stevenson Poems A. Montgomery (1910) xxix. 67 Hes justice wald me sone rewers To the deip pitt of hell. d. transitive. To disorder, to upset. Obsolete. rare. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > disorder > [verb (transitive)] > throw into utter disorder or upset to-turna1382 everse?a1425 over-terve?a1425 bestourn1484 renverse1521 transverse1557 evert1566 walter1571 topsy-turn1573 topsy-turve1603 topsy-turvy1626 bouleverse1673 whemmel1721 reverse1768 upset1818 to knock galley-west1875 topsy-turvify1886 topsy-turvyize1893 1768 H. Brooke Fool of Quality III. xiv. 61 A sudden sickness relaxed and reversed my whole frame. 8. a. transitive. To turn or place the other way round in respect of position or aspect; to exchange the positions or functions of (two people or things).to reverse the medal: see medal n. 4. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > inversion > invert [verb (transitive)] to-wendc893 whelvec1000 to turn down?c1335 to turn up?c1335 whelmc1340 overturna1382 to turn overa1400 wholve14.. inverse?a1425 reverse?a1425 overwhelvec1450 overvolvea1522 transverse1557 evert1566 topsy-turn1573 topsy-turve1603 invert1610 upturn1610 whave1611 topsy-turvy1626 whemmel1684 cant1850 upend1868 flip-flop1924 ?a1425 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (N.Y. Acad. Med.) f. 87 Signez of cancre ar taken of þingez substancialy cleuyng in, as..of þe vlcere, of figure brode & rounde, cauernose & reuersed [?c1425 Paris turned inwarde; L. reuersata]. a1450 (?c1400) Comm. Ave Maria (Bodl.) in T. Arnold Sel. Eng. Wks. J. Wyclif (1871) III. 112 (MED) Þe firste word, þat is Ave, reversiþ þe name of Eva. 1587 A. Fleming et al. Holinshed's Chron. (new ed.) III. 896/2 Certeine prelats, whom..they set vpon asses and leane mules, and with their faces reuersed to the crowp of the beasts. 1596 W. Warner Albions Eng. (rev. ed.) xii. lxxv. 306 Reuerse the Cope. 1615 G. Sandys Relation of Journey 55 At which time they reuerse their faces, first ouer the right shoulder, and then ouer the left. 1698 J. Fryer New Acct. E.-India & Persia 319 I saw the Old Moon go out on the Hills at Lhor, and the Night following, the Horns reversed. 1777 J. Anderson Inst. Physics I. xviii. 118 By an electric shock the poles of a magnetic needle are sometimes reversed. 1785 W. Cowper Tirocinium in Task 443 And he, that seem'd our counterpart at first, Soon shows the strong similitude revers'd . View more context for this quotation 1840 D. Lardner Treat. Geom. 70 Because the position of the triangles on either side of the diagonal is reversed. 1878 W. de W. Abney Treat. Photogr. (1881) 187 It will be found that as regards right and left the pictures will be reversed. 1911 H. MacGrath Carpet from Bagdad iv. 57 A man who was down to reversing his collars and cuffs. 1950 E. Hemingway Across River & into Trees i. 6 He took the long oar the boatman handed him and reversed it so he could hold it by the blade. 1988 A. Bishop Gentleman Rider xxxvii. 305 Both trilogies begin with the woman's account, but the order of subsequent volumes is reversed. 1998 Kincardine (Ont.) News 18 Mar. b3/2 Andrew Mooy scored..on a nice feed from Kyle. They reversed roles and Kyle scored from Andrew Mooy. ΘΚΠ the world > space > direction > specific directions > direct in specific directions [verb (transitive)] > direct or turn backwards returna1450 reverse1523 to turn back1579 retort1583 reverta1657 1523 J. Skelton Goodly Garlande of Laurell 3 When Mars retrogradant reuersyd his bak. 9. a. transitive. To cause to move in the opposite direction; to send on a course contrary to the previous or usual one; to turn around. Also figurative. ΘΚΠ the world > space > direction > direct [verb (transitive)] > reverse the direction of reverse?a1439 return1483 to turn back1579 alternate1595 re-enverse1603 retrovert1637 obvert1646 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > backward movement > cause to move back [verb (transitive)] > turn back or reverse the course of reverse?a1439 to turn back?1531 return?1542 retrograde1582 tergiverse1602 turn1665 to roll back1695 revert1814 a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) viii. 2320 (MED) Fortune hath hir wheel reuersid. 1509 S. Hawes Pastime of Pleasure (1928) xxxvii. 194 At the last I dyde his body perce With my good swerde he myght not it reuerce. 1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 690/1 The thynge went forwarde a whyle marvayllously, but nowe it is reversed we wotte nat howe. 1661 T. Salusbury tr. B. Castellus Mensuration Running Waters ii. 80 in Math. Coll. & Transl. I Fiume morto hath reversed its course upwards towards Pisa. 1781 W. Cowper Retirem. 327 The screws revers'd.., Ten thousand thousand strings at once go loose. 1824 ‘R. Stuart’ Descr. Hist. Steam Engine 49 The ingenious mode of consuming smoke by reversing the flame. 1891 ‘S. C. Scrivener’ Our Fields & Cities 5 Watch it approaching us without wind. The mighty stream is being reversed! 1924 A. J. Allmand & H. J. T. Ellingham Princ. Appl. Electrochem. (ed. 2) xiv. 239 A current was passed between two sheets of lead in dilute H2SO4, its direction being frequently reversed. 1962 I. Murdoch Unoffic. Rose (1971) iii. xi. 111 A sense of the stupid undignified nature of such a flight made him reverse his movement. 1990 M. Dibdin Vendetta (1991) 14 Zen reversed the tape again briefly, hauling the swimmer up out of the water once more, and then froze the picture. 1997 I. Sinclair Lights out for Territory (1998) 220 If their raid had been successful, they would have reversed time and never been seen again in this dimension. b. transitive. To cause (an engine) to work or revolve in the contrary direction. Also intransitive. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > operate engine [verb (transitive)] > cause to work in reverse reverse1828 society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > engine > of an engine: operative [verb (intransitive)] > work in reverse reverse1860 1828 J. Ross Treat. Navigation by Steam vii. 140 Reverse the Engine. Left hand up to the face, but not above it. 1860 Mercantile Marine Mag. 7 274 Stopped the engines, and reversed full power. 1883 Law Times Rep. 49 332/1 The engines of the Clan Sinclair were stopped and reversed full speed. 1940 Railroad Mag. Apr. 40/2 Chew cinders, engines do this when reversed while running and while working quite a bit of steam. 1951 H. L. Horton Ingenious Mechanisms III. xviii. 478 The lever arrangement..is used on a spring winding machine which is reversed frequently by reversing the driving motor. 1998 S. Sontag & C. Drew Blind Man's Bluff vii. 155 If his crew could reverse the engines, their sub just might drive herself to the surface. c. transitive. To drive (a motor vehicle) so as to travel backwards; to put (a motor vehicle) into reverse gear. Also intransitive. ΘΚΠ society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > driving or operating a vehicle > drive a vehicle [verb (transitive)] > drive a motor vehicle > reverse reverse1896 1896 Cosmopolitan Feb. 419/2 A lateral movement of the lever starts the wheels, a vertical motion reverses and stops the vehicle. 1913 G. B. Shaw Let. 17 Sept. in Bernard Shaw & Mrs. P. Campbell (1952) 148 I..had to drive right up it..reversing at impossible hairpin corners. 1939 J. Harrison Motor-cars To-day ix. 111 When one wishes to reverse the car the bottom-speed wheel is moved towards the rear of the gearbox. 1966 ‘A. Hall’ 9th Directive xx. 187 He told the chauffeur to reverse the Lincoln. 1973 M. Sling tr. L. Vaculík Axe xv. 206 My brother reversed the bus into the garage. a1976 A. Christie Autobiogr. (1977) vii. ii. 332 I don't think I can really reverse at all... The car never seems to go where I think it's going. 2006 L. Kelly Crocodile vii. 176 They stopped and started the motor, reversed the boat—anything to provoke the crocodile into attack. 10. a. intransitive. To draw back or away; to move backwards. Also figurative. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > backward movement > move backwards [verb (intransitive)] reversec1450 recoil1483 back1486 regressa1525 retire1542 flinch1578 retrograde1613 recur1616 retrocede1638 ravel1656 backen1748 regrede1800 regrade1811 retrogress1812 c1450 tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Lyfe Manhode (Cambr.) (1869) 119 Adam..mihte bi no wise taste it but he went reuersinge [Fr. en recullant]. And reuerse miht he nouht but he hadde first the spore. c1450 J. Capgrave Life St. Katherine (Arun. 396) (1893) v. 529 (MED) The more benyngnely that we trete ȝow heere..þe more ȝe reuers. 1509 S. Hawes Pastime of Pleasure (1928) xxi. 157 With many mo that I do not reherce; My tyme is shorte, I must fro them reuerce. 1578 W. Bourne Treasure for Traueilers v. vi. f. 11v The water commeth in with a great sway, and will not vppon the sodayne reuerse backe agayne. c1643 N. Boteler Dialogues (1929) (modernized text) 83 Pawl the Capstan, which is stop it with the pawl that it reverse not. 1692 Smith's Sea-mans Gram. (new ed.) ii. iv. 92 He ought to see..whether one Wheel be higher, or reverse faster than the other. 1828 J. M. Spearman Brit. Gunner 178 When the limber is sufficiently to the rear, it reverses to its left... The ammunition wagon also reverses to its left. 1890 L. B. Hunt Hand-bk. Light Gymnastics (new ed.) 72 March on a few steps in opposite direction, skip a few steps, reverse quickly and march. 1906 J. London White Fang iv. iv. 228 Round and round he went, whirling and turning and reversing. 1987 QuarterBack (Charlbury) Mar. 27/2 Wendell Tyler broke one tackle and appeared to be reversing back across from field. 1999 D. Ball Empires of Sand (2001) xxvii. 574 She [sc. a hawk] reversed quickly on an updraft, bringing her wings slightly forward. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > backward movement > move backwards [verb (intransitive)] > return towards point of departure repaira1325 returna1325 rebounda1382 redounda1382 recovera1393 to go backc1425 revertc1475 renew1488 reverse1542 retire1567 revolve1587 reciprocate1623 retrovert1639 to get back1664 recur1719 hoicks1762 boomerang1900 1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes ii. f. 189v At what tyme Alexander reuersed backe again to the sea (to departe out of his armie). ?c1550 tr. P. Vergil Eng. Hist. (1846) I. v. 198 Kinge Ethelwolphus, after hee hadd made his abode at Rome the greatest parte of the yeare, he reversed homewarde. 1591 E. Spenser Ruines of Rome in Complaints 305 The bands of th' elements shall backe reverse To their first discord. 1647 H. More Philos. Poems iii. App. ix Transgressing souls are sorely scourged And back again are forced to reverse By Nemesis deep-biting whips well urged. c. intransitive. In dancing, esp. waltzing: to move or turn in a contrary direction. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > dancing > movements or steps > [verb (intransitive)] > specific movements gambol1508 gig1693 reverse1859 hesitate1914 society > leisure > dancing > movements or steps > [verb (intransitive)] > steps cut1603 heel1609 coupee1690 chassé1803 pigeon-wing1823 glissade1837 high-kicka1850 to cover the buckle1852 reverse1859 sashay1905 1859 E. Ferrero Art Dancing 125 To the left, 4 bars; and reverse, 4 bars; finishing so as to stand on the left of their partners. 1864 M. B. Chesnut Diary 6 July in C. V. Woodward Mary Chesnut's Civil War (1981) xxv. 620 A lame man can't reverse—as they call it [in] waltzing. 1884 Wallace Man. Dancing 32 The four Gentlemen walk round the outside, reversing when the Ladies reverse. 1912 V. B. Carter Diary 25 May in Winston Churchill (1965) xviii. 254 As he [sc. Ld. Fisher] never reverses I reel giddily in his arms and lurch against his heart of oak. 1982 E. Simpson Poets in their Youth v. 101 The best waltzer in Princeton (and the only one who knew how to reverse), Erich would have liked nothing better than to entertain in the old style. 1995 R. Pilcher Coming Home (1996) 301 They were the only pair who knew how to reverse properly. d. intransitive. Of a motor vehicle: to travel backwards; to move in reverse gear. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > backward movement > move backwards [verb (intransitive)] > move in reverse direction back1894 reverse1896 1864 T. L. Ainsley Guide Bk. Local Marine Board Exam. (ed. 8) 321 She must starboard if necessary, or port if necessary; and she must stop and reverse if necessary. 1896 Cosmopolitan 20 420 The vehicle [sc. a Hill locomotor] is stopped by throwing the lever forward to the limit of its stroke, and if required to reverse suddenly, the operator simply pushes forward the lever. 1919 C. Cato Navy Everywhere xvi. 224 Smiles found that he could not get his car to reverse. 1953 K. Amis Lucky Jim xiii. 132 The taxi..was just beginning to reverse cautiously into the side turning. 2007 J. Kelly Skeleton Man (2008) ix. 92 A bus reversed, grinding gears, while two shops along a parrot screeched. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > falling > fall [verb (intransitive)] > fall down or from erect position fallOE to fall downc1175 torple?c1225 glidec1275 overthrowc1330 downfallc1350 swaya1400 reversea1470 twine1600 to go down1697 a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll.) 278 Sir Launcelot charged so sore uppon hym that his horse reversed up-so-downe. a1500 (?c1450) Merlin 157 (MED) The kynge..saugh the kynge Tradelyuaunt reuerse [Fr. uerse] to the erthe. a1533 Ld. Berners tr. Arthur of Brytayn (?1560) lxvii. sig. Qvv I ensure you I shall make hym reuerse from his horse. 12. intransitive. Bridge. To rebid in a suit of a higher rank than that of one's previous bid. Cf. reverse n. 14. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > card game > bridge > play bridge [verb (intransitive)] > actions or tactics > bid > types of bid overbid1887 double1894 redouble1894 to go back1900 pre-empt1913 rebid1914 S.O.S.1926 overcall1927 cue-bid1932 psych1932 to sign off1932 reverse1939 sacrifice1952 to pass out1959 stop1959 underbid1974 under-call- 1939 N. de V. Hart Bridge Players' Bedside Bk. 132 An exception occurs when the partner forces the original bidder to reverse. In that case, the reverse may not indicate additional values. 1959 Listener 29 Jan. 229/1 He has already shown five hearts, inasmuch as he bid that suit and then reversed in spades. 1999 B. Seagram & M. Smith 25 Bridge Convent. you should Know v. 52 You must make a forcing bid after partner reverses. 13. intransitive. Business (originally British). With into. Of a company: to merge with another company by means of a reverse takeover; esp. (of a private company) to merge with a public company as a means of attaining a stock listing. Also transitive: to transfer the assets of (a company) into another by such a merger. Cf. reverse takeover n. at reverse adj. and adv. Compounds 2. ΚΠ 1967 Business Jan. 43/1 Fuller-Shapcott soon spotted the company to reverse into. 1981 Sunday Times 15 Nov. 55/6 A 75% stake in Mei Fung—which is little more than a shell—has been bought by Yue Wah Emporium... Yue Wah is owned by the Chinese government, but is to be reversed into Mei Fung. 1992 Investors Chron. 23 Oct. 47/2 Birkby, the office rental company which reversed into Finlan group in August, is buying two disused textile mills. 1997 Business Age Sept. 51/1 He..joined a plc shell, before helping to reverse a successful private company into it. 2008 Manch. Evening News (Nexis) 13 Feb. 31 The pair were early investors in Midas Capital Partners, which has reversed into listed company Iimia Miton Optimal. Phrases to reverse (the) charges: to make the recipient of a telephone call responsible for payment. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telephony > communicate by telephone [verb (intransitive)] > reverse charges to reverse (the) charges1909 1909 3rd Ann. Rep. Commissioner of Health Pennsylvania 1908 392 You are then authorized..to telephone, reversing charges to this office for the necessary additional supply. 1912 Bull. Photogr. 12 June 791/1 We have a long-distance telephone in both our Brigden and Alvinston studios, and if you will tell Central to ‘reverse the charges’ it won't cost you a penny. 1951 ‘E. Crispin’ Long Divorce xiv. 172 If you want to go on talking we must reverse the charges. 1984 A. Oakley Taking it like Woman (1985) 36 In the early weeks I rang my parents frequently, always reversing the charges. 2004 I. Flick & H. Goodall Isabel Flick v. 109 I told him that you'd ring there and here's the number you can ring, reverse the charges. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2010; most recently modified version published online June 2022). † reversev.2 Obsolete. transitive (reflexive). To put on vestments. ΘΚΠ society > faith > artefacts > vestments > [verb (transitive)] > clothe in revestc1300 reversea1400 revesha1450 a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Gött.) l. 10949 (MED) Zachari vn-to þe temple ȝede To do þe folk þair seruis..Reuersid [Vesp. Reuest, Trin. Cambr. reuested, c1460 Laud revestid] him on his manere. ?a1425 (a1325) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Digby) (1887) 8392 Reuersede [c1325 Calig. Bissopes & prestes & men of religion..Reuestede hom in chirche]. a1450 (c1410) H. Lovelich Hist. Holy Grail xlvi. 234 (MED) Iosephes, that of the Cristene Maister was, him gan to Reversen [Fr. se fu reviestus]..and to-fore the holy vessel he wente To sein his Masse. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2010; most recently modified version published online December 2020). < n.c1390adj.adv.a1393v.1c1350v.2a1400 |
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