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Reverse   /rɪvˈərs/  /rivˈərs/   Listen
Reverse

noun
1.
A relation of direct opposition.  Synonyms: contrary, opposite.
2.
The gears by which the motion of a machine can be reversed.  Synonym: reverse gear.
3.
An unfortunate happening that hinders or impedes; something that is thwarting or frustrating.  Synonyms: black eye, blow, reversal, setback.
4.
The side of a coin or medal that does not bear the principal design.  Synonym: verso.
5.
(American football) a running play in which a back running in one direction hands the ball to a back running in the opposite direction.
6.
Turning in the opposite direction.  Synonyms: reversal, reversion, turnabout, turnaround.
verb
(past & past part. reversed;pres. part. reversing)
1.
Change to the contrary.  Synonyms: change by reversal, turn.  "The tides turned against him" , "Public opinion turned when it was revealed that the president had an affair with a White House intern"
2.
Turn inside out or upside down.  Synonyms: invert, turn back.
3.
Rule against.  Synonyms: override, overrule, overthrow, overturn.
4.
Cancel officially.  Synonyms: annul, countermand, lift, overturn, repeal, rescind, revoke, vacate.  "Lift an embargo" , "Vacate a death sentence"
5.
Reverse the position, order, relation, or condition of.  Synonym: invert.
adjective
1.
Directed or moving toward the rear.  Synonym: rearward.  "A rearward movement"
2.
Of the transmission gear causing backward movement in a motor vehicle.
3.
Reversed (turned backward) in order or nature or effect.  Synonym: inverse.



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"Reverse" Quotes from Famous Books



... the contemporary, but scarcely the friend, of Lord Byron. No two characters could have been more unlike. Every one knows, more or less, what Byron's was; it need only be said that Hook's was the reverse of it in every respect. Byron felt where Hook laughed. Byron was morbid where Hook was gay. Byron abjured with disgust the social vices to which he was introduced; Hook fell in with them. Byron indulged in vice in a romantic way; Hook in the coarsest. There is some excuse for Byron, much as ...
— The Wits and Beaux of Society - Volume 2 • Grace & Philip Wharton

... Shakespeare closed his life on earth'—we have obtained a piece of knowledge which is both interesting and pleasant. But if it be not true, if, on the contrary, it can be shown that something very different was actually the case, then will it not follow that we must not only reverse our judgment as to this particular point, but also readjust our view of the whole drift and bearing of Shakespeare's ...
— Books and Characters - French and English • Lytton Strachey

... Molineux and Davis on the reverse side of the entrenchments, both brigades began moving off, under Emory's orders, by the right flank to take position near Belle Grove on the right of Ricketts's division of the Sixth Corps, which had come up and was trying to extend ...
— History of the Nineteenth Army Corps • Richard Biddle Irwin

... Dane, or the Frenchman, were discovered to be a fictitious personage, and all the genius, or all the rant, to have really emanated from the English gentleman, or lady, who had merely professed to translate—presto! how the book would instantly change colours! What a reverse of judgment would there be! What secret misgivings would now be detected and proclaimed! What sudden outpourings of epithets by no means complimentary! How the boldness of many a metaphor would be transformed into sheer impudence! How the profundities would clear up, leaving only darkness ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 62, No. 384, October 1847 • Various

... Miss Graham against me. The difference between my sister and me,' she added, turning to Gladys, 'is that Clara is always proper and conventional, and I am the reverse. You can never catch her unawares or in an untidy gown, she is always just as immaculate as you see her now; while I am—well, just as the spirit moves me.' She swept a little mocking courtesy to her sister, who only smiled and shook her head, then taking ...
— The Guinea Stamp - A Tale of Modern Glasgow • Annie S. Swan


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