back out of / bæk /

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back out of5 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. the rear part of the human body, extending from the neck to the lower end of the spine.
  2. the part of the body of animals corresponding to the human back.
  3. the rear portion of any part of the body: the back of the head.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to support, as with authority, influence, help, or money: to back a candidate; to back up a theory with facts.
  2. to bet on: to back a horse in the race.
  3. to cause to move backward: to back a car.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to go or move backward.
  2. Nautical. to change direction counterclockwise.
adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. situated at or in the rear: at the back door; back fence.
  2. far away or removed from the front or main area, position, or rank; remote: back settlements.
  3. belonging to the past: back files; back issues.
v. 动词组 verb
  1. back away, to retreat; withdraw: They gradually began to back away from their earlier opinion.
  2. back down, to abandon an argument, opinion, or claim; withdraw; retreat: He backed down as soon as a member of the audience challenged his assertion.
  3. back off, to back down: Now that the time for action had arrived, it was too late to back off.Textiles.to reverse in mule spinning prior to winding on the newly spun length of yarn.

back out of 近义词

back out of

等同于 back-pedal

back out of

等同于 rescind

back out of

等同于 retract

back out of

等同于 revoke

back out of构成的短语

  • back against the wall
  • back alley
  • back and fill
  • back and forth
  • back away
  • back burner, on a
  • back door
  • back down
  • back in circulation
  • back in harness
  • back number
  • back of
  • back of beyond
  • back off
  • back of one's hand
  • back of one's mind
  • back on one's feet
  • back order
  • back out
  • back street
  • back the wrong horse
  • back to back
  • back to basics
  • back to the drawing board
  • back to the salt mines
  • back to the wall
  • back up
  • back water
  • a while back
  • behind someone's back
  • break one's back
  • break the back of
  • call back
  • choke back
  • come back
  • cut back
  • double back
  • draw back
  • drop back
  • eyes in the back of one's head
  • fall back
  • fall back on
  • fall over (backward)
  • flat on one's back
  • from way back
  • get back
  • get one's back up
  • give the shirt off one's back
  • go back on one's word
  • hang back
  • hark(en) back
  • hold back
  • in one's own backyard
  • kick back
  • knock back
  • know like a book (the back of one's hand)
  • left-handed (back-handed) compliment
  • like water off a duck's back
  • look back
  • monkey on one's back
  • off someone's back
  • pat on the back
  • pay back in someone's own coin
  • pin someone's ears back
  • play back
  • plow back
  • pull back
  • put one's back in it
  • put one's back up
  • roll back
  • scratch someone's back
  • see the back of
  • set back
  • set back on one's heels
  • set one back
  • set the clock back
  • sit back
  • slap on the back
  • snap back
  • stab in the back
  • take aback
  • take a back seat
  • take back
  • talk back
  • think back
  • throw back
  • turn back
  • turn one's back on
  • when someone's back is turned
  • with one arm tied behind one's back
  • you scratch my back and I'll scratch yours

更多back out of例句

  1. Think back to the Bush-Kerry race of 2004, the Thrilla in Vanilla.
  2. Back in New York, the slow pace and inward focus of her yoga practice was less fulfilling.
  3. Music is a huge part of the tone of Black Dynamite overall—going back to the original 2009 movie on which the series is based.
  4. The al Qaeda-linked gunmen shot back, but only managed to injure one officer before they were taken out.
  5. So, Islamized teaching sends girls back home for marriage and housework, and remains exclusively for boys.
  6. I waited three months more, in great impatience, then sent him back to the same post, to see if there might be a reply.
  7. Ages back—let musty geologists tell us how long ago—'twas a lake, larger than the Lake of Geneva.
  8. The boys were tumbling about, clinging to his legs, imploring that numerous things be brought back to them.
  9. With a suffocating gasp, she fell back into the chair on which she sat, and covered her face with her hands.
  10. She was holding the back of her chair with one hand; her loose sleeve had slipped almost to the shoulder of her uplifted arm.