What is the meaning of RECED. Phrases containing RECED
See meanings and uses of RECED!RECED
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Acronyms & AI meanings
: Successive Approximation Register, Scalability Availability And Reliability, System Activity Report, System Activity Reporting, System Activity Report, Search And Replace, Segmentation And Reassembly, Segmentation And Reassembly, System Activity Report, Structure Activity Relationship, System Archirval And Retrival, Shift Arithmetic Right, Sample of Anonymised Records, SAR Compressed file archive
Steady Level Unaccelerated Flight
Greenhouse Information Program Grants Scheme
Ziegler-Natta Catalyst
Jefferson Bank and Trust
Youth for Asian Theater
Regional Core Switch
American Legal Foundation
Central Gear Box
National Public Service Week
RECED
RECED
A prefix signifying back, against, again, anew; as, recline, to lean back; recall, to call back; recede; remove; reclaim, to call out against; repugn, to fight against; recognition, a knowing again; rejoin, to join again; reiterate; reassure. Combinations containing the prefix re- are readily formed, and are for the most part of obvious signification.
RECED
a.
Expansive force; the force with which the particles of a body, as a gas, tend to recede from each other and occupy a larger space; elastic force; elasticity; as, the tension of vapor; the tension of air.
v. i.
To cede back; to grant or yield again to a former possessor; as, to recede conquered territory.
v. i.
To yield or recede; to give place; to show respect by yielding, uncovering, or the like.
v. i.
To become less; to shrink; to contract; to decrease; to be diminished; as, the apparent magnitude of objects lessens as we recede from them; his care, or his wealth, lessened.
a.
Not stable; not standing fast or firm; unstable; prone to change or recede from a purpose; mutable; inconstant.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Recede
n.
That which holds back, or causes to recede; a drawback; a hindrance.
imp. & p. p.
of Recede
a.
Winding or circling round a center or pole and gradually receding from it; as, the spiral curve of a watch spring.
a.
To move the foot in walking; to advance or recede by raising and moving one of the feet to another resting place, or by moving both feet in succession.
v. i.
To turn aside; to recede.
a.
The art and the science of so delineating objects that they shall seem to grow smaller as they recede from the eye; -- called also linear perspective.
v. i.
To start back; to recoil; to recede from a purpose.
v. i.
To recede; to fall or bend back; as, the shore of the sea retires in bays and gulfs.
v. t.
To resist, without yielding or receding; to withstand.
v. i.
To withdraw a claim or pretension; to desist; to relinquish what had been proposed or asserted; as, to recede from a demand or proposition.
n.
A Phrygian king who was punished in the lower world by being placed in the midst of a lake whose waters reached to his chin but receded whenever he attempted to allay his thirst, while over his head hung branches laden with choice fruit which likewise receded whenever he stretched out his hand to grasp them.
n.
The power, either inherent or due to some physical action, by which bodies, or the particles of bodies, are made to recede from each other, or to resist each other's nearer approach; as, molecular repulsion; electrical repulsion.
n.
That part of a landscape which recedes from the spectator into distance.
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