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Synonyms of the word 
REGRESS → CHANGE - DECLINE - LAPSE - REASONING - RECIDIVATE - REGRESS - REGRESSION - RELAPSE - RETROGRADE - RETROGRESS - RETROGRESSION - RETROVERSION - RETROVERT - RETURN - REVERSAL - REVERSE - REVERSION - REVERT - TURN - WORSENregress- n. The act of passing back; passage back; return; retrogression.
- n. The power or liberty of passing back.
- n. In property law, the right of a person (such as a lessee) to return to a property.
- v. (intransitive) To move backwards to an earlier stage; to devolve.
- v. (transitive, statistics) To perform a regression on an explanatory variable.
change- v. (intransitive) To become something different.
- v. (transitive, ergative) To make something into something different.
- v. (transitive) To replace.
- v. (intransitive) To replace one's clothing.
- v. (intransitive) To transfer to another vehicle (train, bus, etc.).
- v. (archaic) To exchange.
- v. (transitive) To change hand while riding (a horse).
- n. (countable) The process of becoming different.
- n. (uncountable) Small denominations of money given in exchange for a larger denomination.
- n. (countable) A replacement, e.g. a change of clothes.
- n. (uncountable) Money given back when a customer hands over more than the exact price of an item.
- n. (uncountable) Coins (as opposed to paper money).
- n. (countable) A transfer between vehicles.
- n. (baseball) A change-up pitch.
- n. (campanology) Any order in which a number of bells are struck, other than that of the diatonic scale.
- n. (dated) A place where merchants and others meet to transact business; an exchange.
- n. (Scotland, dated) A public house; an alehouse.
decline- n. Downward movement, fall.
- n. A sloping downward, e.g. of a hill or road.
- n. A weakening.
- n. A reduction or diminution of activity.
- v. (intransitive) To move downwards, to fall, to drop.
- v. (intransitive) To become weaker or worse.
- v. (transitive) To bend downward; to bring down; to depress; to cause to bend, or fall.
- v. (transitive) To cause to decrease or diminish.
- v. To turn or bend aside; to deviate; to stray; to withdraw.
- v. (transitive) To refuse, forbear.
- v. (transitive, grammar, usually of substantives, adjectives and pronouns) To inflect for case, number and…
- v. (by extension) To run through from first to last; to repeat like a schoolboy declining a noun.
- v. (American football, Canadian football) To reject a penalty against the opposing team, usually because…
lapse- n. A temporary failure; a slip.
- n. A decline or fall in standards.
- n. A pause in continuity.
- n. An interval of time between events.
- n. A termination of a right etc, through disuse or neglect.
- n. (meteorology) A marked decrease in air temperature with increasing altitude because the ground is warmer…
- n. (law) A common-law rule that if the person to whom property is willed were to die before the testator,…
- n. (theology) A fall or apostasy.
- v. (intransitive) To fall away gradually; to subside.
- v. (intransitive) To fall into error or heresy.
- v. To slip into a bad habit that one is trying to avoid.
- v. (intransitive) To become void.
- v. To fall or pass from one proprietor to another, or from the original destination, by the omission, negligence,…
reasoning- n. Action of the verb to reason.
- n. The deduction of inferences or interpretations from premises; abstract thought; ratiocination.
- n. A Rastafari meeting held for the purposes of chanting, prayer and discussion.
- v. present participle of reason.
recidivate- v. (intransitive) To return to criminal behaviour; to relapse.
regress- n. The act of passing back; passage back; return; retrogression.
- n. The power or liberty of passing back.
- n. In property law, the right of a person (such as a lessee) to return to a property.
- v. (intransitive) To move backwards to an earlier stage; to devolve.
- v. (transitive, statistics) To perform a regression on an explanatory variable.
regression- n. An action of regressing, a return to a previous state.
- n. An action of travelling back in time.
- n. (psychotherapy) A psychotherapeutic method whereby healing is facilitated by inducing the patient to act…
- n. (statistics) An analytic method to measure the association of one or more independent variables with a…
- n. (statistics) An equation using specified and associated data for two or more variables such that one variable…
- n. (programming) The reappearance of a bug in a piece of software that had previously been fixed.
- n. (medicine) The diminishing of a cellular mass like a tumor, or of an organ size.
relapse- v. (intransitive) To fall back again; to slide or turn back into a former state or practice.
- v. (intransitive, medicine, of a disease) To recur; to worsen, be aggravated.
- v. To slip or slide back physically; to turn back.
- n. The act or situation of relapsing.
- n. (medicine) An occasion when a person becomes ill again after a period of improvement.
- n. (obsolete) One who has relapsed, or fallen back into error; a backslider.
retrograde- adj. Directed backwards, retreating; reverting especially inferior state, declining; inverse, reverse; movement…
- adj. Counterproductive to a desired outcome.
- adj. (astronomy, of a body orbiting another) In the opposite direction to the orbited body's spin.
- adj. (geology) Describing a metamorphic change resulting from a decreasing pressure or temperature.
- n. A degenerate person.
- n. (music) The reversal of a melody so that what is played first in the original melody is played last and…
- v. (intransitive) To move backwards; to recede; to retire; to decline; to revert.
- v. (intransitive, astronomy) To show retrogradation.
retrogress- v. (intransitive) To return to an earlier, simpler or worse condition; to regress.
- v. (intransitive) To go backwards; to retreat.
- v. (intransitive) To return to bad behaviour; to relapse.
retrogression- n. A deterioration or decline to a previous state.
- n. (biology) A return to a less complex condition.
retroversion- n. (medicine) The state or condition of being retroverted.
retrovertreturn- v. (intransitive) To come or go back (to a place or person).
- v. (intransitive) To go back in thought, narration, or argument.
- v. (intransitive, obsolete) To turn back, retreat.
- v. (transitive, obsolete) To turn (something) round.
- v. (transitive) To place or put back something where it had been.
- v. (transitive) To give something back to its original holder or owner.
- v. (transitive) To take back something to a vendor for a refund.
- v. To give in requital or recompense; to requite.
- v. (tennis) To bat the ball back over the net in response to a serve.
- v. (card games) To play a card as a result of another player's lead.
- v. (cricket) To throw a ball back to the wicket-keeper (or a fielder at that position) from somewhere in…
- v. (transitive) To say in reply; to respond.
- v. (intransitive, computing) To relinquish control to the calling procedure.
- v. (transitive, computing) To pass (data) back to the calling procedure.
- v. (transitive, dated) To retort; to throw back.
- v. (transitive) To report, or bring back and make known.
- v. (by extension, Britain) To elect according to the official report of the election officers.
- n. The act of returning.
- n. A return ticket.
- n. An item that is returned, e.g. due to a defect, or the act of returning it.
- n. An answer.
- n. An account, or formal report, of an action performed, of a duty discharged, of facts or statistics, etc…
- n. Gain or loss from an investment.
- n. (taxation, finance): A report of income submitted to a government for purposes of specifying exact tax…
- n. (computing) A carriage return character.
- n. (computing) The act of relinquishing control to the calling procedure.
- n. (computing) A return value: the data passed back from a called procedure.
- n. A short perpendicular extension of a desk, usually slightly lower.
- n. (American football) Catching a ball after a punt and running it back towards the opposing team.
- n. (cricket) A throw from a fielder to the wicket-keeper or to another fielder at the wicket.
- n. (architecture) The continuation in a different direction, most often at a right angle, of a building,…
reversal- n. The state of being reversed.
- n. An instance of reversing.
- n. A change in fortune; a change from being successful to having problems.
- adj. Intended to reverse; implying reversal.
reverse- adj. Opposite, contrary; going in the opposite direction.
- adj. Pertaining to engines, vehicle movement etc. moving in a direction opposite to the usual direction.
- adj. (rail transport, of points) To be in the non-default position; to be set for the lesser-used route.
- adj. Turned upside down; greatly disturbed.
- adj. (botany) Reversed.
- adj. (genetics) In which cDNA synthetization is obtained from an RNA template.
- adv. (now rare) In a reverse way or direction; upside-down.
- n. The opposite of something.
- n. The act of going backwards; a reversal.
- n. A piece of misfortune; a setback.
- n. The tails side of a coin, or the side of a medal or badge that is opposite the obverse.
- n. The side of something facing away from a viewer, or from what is considered the front; the other side.
- n. The gear setting of an automobile that makes it travel backwards.
- n. A thrust in fencing made with a backward turn of the hand; a backhanded stroke.
- n. (surgery) A turn or fold made in bandaging, by which the direction of the bandage is changed.
- v. (intransitive) To turn something around such that it faces in the opposite direction.
- v. (intransitive) To turn something inside out or upside down.
- v. (intransitive) To transpose the positions of two things.
- v. (transitive) To change totally; to alter to the opposite.
- v. (obsolete, intransitive) To return, come back.
- v. (obsolete, transitive) To turn away; to cause to depart.
- v. (obsolete, transitive) To cause to return; to recall.
- v. (law) To revoke a law, or to change a decision into its opposite.
- v. (ergative) To cause a mechanism or a vehicle to operate or move in the opposite direction to normal.
- v. (chemistry) To change the direction of a reaction such that the products become the reactants and vice-versa.
- v. (rail transport, transitive) To place a set of points in the reverse position.
- v. (rail transport, intransitive, of points) to move from the normal position to the reverse position.
- v. To overthrow; to subvert.
reversion- n. The action of reverting something.
- n. The action of returning to a former condition or practice; reversal.
- n. The fact of being turned the reverse way.
- n. The action of turning something the reverse way.
- n. (law) The return of an estate to the donor or grantor after expiry of the grant.
- n. (law) An estate which has been returned in this manner.
- n. (law) The right of succeeding to an estate, or to another possession.
- n. The right of succeeding to an office after the death or retirement of the holder.
- n. The return of a genetic characteristic after a period of suppression.
- n. A sum payable on a person's death.
revert- n. One who, or that which, reverts.
- n. (religion) One who reverts to that religion which he had adhered to before having converted to another.
- n. (Islam, due to the belief that all people are born Muslim) A convert to Islam.
- n. (computing) The act of reversion (of e.g. a database transaction or source control repository) to an earlier…
- v. (transitive, now rare) To turn back, or turn to the contrary; to reverse.
- v. To throw back; to reflect; to reverberate.
- v. (transitive) To cause to return to a former condition.
- v. (intransitive, now rare) To return; to come back.
- v. (intransitive) To return to the possession of.
- v. (transitive) To cause (a property or rights) to return to the previous owner.
- v. (intransitive) To return to a former practice, condition, belief, etc.
- v. (intransitive, biology) To return to an earlier or primitive type or state; to take on the traits or characters…
- v. (intransitive) To change back, as from a soluble to an insoluble state or the reverse.
- v. (intransitive) To take up again or return to a previous topic.
- v. (intransitive, in Muslim usage, due to the belief that all people are born Muslim) To convert to Islam.
- v. (intransitive, nonstandard, proscribed, often India) To reply; to come back.
- v. (transitive, mathematics) To treat (a series, such as y = a + bx + cx2 + …, where one variable y is expressed…
turn- v. (heading) Non-linear physical movement.
- v. (heading, intransitive) To change condition or attitude.
- v. (obsolete, reflexive) To change one's course of action; to take a new approach.
- v. (transitive, usually with over) To complete.
- v. (transitive, soccer) Of a player, to go past an opposition player with the ball in one's control.
- v. To undergo the process of turning on a lathe.
- v. (obstetrics) To bring down the feet of a child in the womb, in order to facilitate delivery.
- v. (printing, dated) To invert a type of the same thickness, as a temporary substitute for any sort which…
- v. (archaic) To translate.
- n. A change of direction or orientation.
- n. A movement of an object about its own axis in one direction that continues until the object returns to…
- n. A single loop of a coil.
- n. A chance to use (something) shared in sequence with others.
- n. The time allotted to a person in a rota or schedule.
- n. One's chance to make a move in a game having two or more players.
- n. A figure in music, often denoted ~, consisting of the note above the one indicated, the note itself, the…
- n. (also turnaround) The time required to complete a project.
- n. A fit or a period of giddiness.
- n. A change in temperament or circumstance.
- n. (cricket) A sideways movement of the ball when it bounces (caused by rotation in flight).
- n. (poker) The fourth communal card in Texas hold 'em.
- n. (poker, obsolete) The flop (the first three community cards) in Texas hold 'em.
- n. A deed done to another.
- n. (rope) A pass behind or through an object.
- n. Character; personality; nature.
- n. (soccer) An instance of going past an opposition player with the ball in one's control.
- n. (circus) A short skit, act, or routine.
worsen- v. (transitive) To make worse; to impair.
- v. (intransitive) To become worse; to get worse.
- v. (transitive, obsolete) To get the better of; to worst.
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